Spectrum.Life Reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(130 total reviews)
avatar

Stephen Costello

81% approve of CEO

76% positive business outlook

Spectrum.Life has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 130 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Spectrum.Life employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

130 reviews
3.0
6 Dec 2023

Poor progression

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Experience working with different companies.

Cons

Poor pay and progression with no pension.

1.0
14 Jan 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote working is beneficial for some

Cons

Constantly being watched, reviewed and micro managed by managers Lack of well being support for staff No work life balance No flexibility with working hours No time between stressful calls to decompress or write accurate notes

1.0
1 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pros Fully remote work setup A handful of genuinely kind clinical managers (though limited in what they can do) Supportive colleagues who try to get through it together

Cons

Exploitative recruitment: Spectrum preys on newly qualified counsellors straight out of university who don’t know what to expect. They present themselves as supportive but in reality, counsellors are overworked, undersupported, and set up to burn out. Unsafe workload: On average you’re expected to speak to 4–7 clients a day, often high-risk (self-harm, suicidal ideation, sometimes in the process of attempting suicide), with only 5-minute breaks in between. This is emotionally unsafe and clinically irresponsible. Minimal supervision: Only one clinical supervision session a month — far below BACP and ethical recommendations. If you miss it because you’re stuck on a call with a suicidal client, it won’t be rescheduled. This lack of proper supervision puts both counsellors and clients at risk. Staff wellbeing ignored: Spectrum is an employee assistance programme provider yet fails to care for its own employees. The message is clear: productivity over people. Contractual dishonesty: Probation terms are vague and inconsistent. No sick pay during probation (understandable), but during induction we were told probation would only be extended by the exact number of sick days taken. In practice, however, I had my probation extended by an additional month on top of that, with no contractual basis. This kind of inconsistency leaves staff feeling misled and undermines trust from the start. Micromanagement culture: Even well-intentioned managers micromanage constantly, creating pressure instead of support. High turnover: Many staff don’t last long, which speaks for itself. Management often dismisses this by saying “EAP isn’t for everyone” — but that’s a poor excuse. The reality is that people leave because of the way frontline staff are treated: overworked, under-supported, and constantly micromanaged. Burnout and emotional harm: The work environment is draining, isolating, and leads to anxiety and exhaustion. Counsellors are left with moral injury, knowing they can’t provide the level of care clients deserve because of the way Spectrum is structured. No career development: Very little investment in training, upskilling, or progression. It’s a dead-end role that leaves you emotionally depleted. Bottom Line As a practising counsellor of 10 years, I can say Spectrum Life operates on the edge of ethical acceptability while endangering staff wellbeing and, more worryingly, client safety. Their model is built on overloading inexperienced counsellors with high-risk cases while providing minimal supervision, little transparency, and no genuine care for employees. The company’s public image as a mental health support provider is in direct contradiction to the way it treats its own staff. If you are reading this as someone preparing for an interview with Spectrum, I would strongly advise you to look elsewhere. I too read the reviews before joining, saw some negative ones, and dismissed them as angry ex-staff — but I can confirm they are accurate. Every month the CEO and senior managers hold public meetings, and all they focus on is corporate figures. Make no mistake: this is a corporate company, run for profit. Do not come here expecting genuine care or support. They are only interested in numbers, KPIs, and targets. If you fail to hit those, you won’t last. This company urgently needs an external audit of its practices. Until there are sweeping changes to supervision, staff support, and ethical standards, I strongly recommend counsellors — especially those newly qualified — avoid this organisation.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 130 Reviews

Glassdoor has 133 Spectrum.Life reviews submitted anonymously by Spectrum.Life employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Spectrum.Life is right for you.