Ingram Content Group Reviews 6

TrustScore 2.5 out of 5

2.3

While we don't verify specific claims because reviewers' opinions are their own, we may label reviews as "Verified" when we can confirm a business interaction took place. Read more

To protect platform integrity, every review on our platform—verified or not—is screened by our 24/7 automated software. This technology is designed to identify and remove content that breaches our guidelines, including reviews that are not based on a genuine experience. We recognise we may not catch everything, and you can flag anything you think we may have missed. Read more

Company details

  1. Book Publisher
  2. Book Store
  3. Multimedia and Electronic Book Publisher
  4. Publisher

Information provided by various external sources

Ingram Content Group is an American service provider to the book publishing industry, based in La Vergne, Tennessee.


Contact info

2.3

Poor

TrustScore 2.5 out of 5

6 reviews

5-star
4-star
3-star
2-star
1-star

No history of asking for reviews

This company hasn't invited their customers, so reviews may not be representative

How this company uses Trustpilot

See how their reviews and ratings are sourced, scored, and moderated.

Companies on Trustpilot aren't allowed to offer incentives or pay to hide reviews. Reviews are the opinions of individual users and not of Trustpilot. Read more

Rated 1 out of 5 stars

If I could leave 0 stars, I would

If I could, I'd leave zero stars. I was locked out of my account for over 2 weeks, with no reply until weeks later..

The reason is because Ingram wanted me to change my password (that's fine) and when I did, the screen completely froze (NOT fine). I tried to several times and waited a few days it case it was a sie glitch, which is a fairly common on this platform.

I sent the info about the email addy change and the frozen screen to customer service, along with a screenshot to verify they knew what page I was talking about.

After long wait time (Ingram charges $25 for prompt customer service) I received the reply. The person told me I need to change my password every 180 days (OK) and I hadn't done that -- and if I just changed my password it would all be fine.

I was completely bowled over. AS MENTIONED in the email I sent them, when I tried to change the password the screen froze. If CS is that busy, hire more people and maybe they won't get so many bad reviews, like this one. DO NOT try to blame this on the user.

I also do not appreciate the condescending attitude from CS saying they understand how I feel. All companies do this idiotic song and dance about "understanding" how the customer feels. They certainly do not, and this fake solicitousness is even more upsetting. They are are getting paid for this hassle, I am not.

The least they could do is read the message properly. The part about the screen freezing is even in the title of the email!

As mentioned, this is a known problem and has to be fixed. Instead, Ingram uses it to leach money out of people who need costumer service. I'm totally disgusted.

Finally, before the completely unknowledgeable CS person finally got in touch I found a tricky workaround and got back into my account. I won't mention what it is, because in my experience when someone publishes a workaround for any company, the company puts an end to this immediately. Since Ingram charges $25 for customer service I assume they would do the same thing.

If there were another way to get my eBook books onto Amazon (who refused to open an account for me as the bot tells me my legitimate Canadian ID isn't Canadian, and the human I finally tracked down told me she couldn't override the bot!!??), yes, if there were another way, I would take it. Unfortunately, for authors not on Amazon, there is very little choice, so we're at the mercy of manipulative corporations like this. This company also takes a whopping 90 days to pay and does not notifies the author of a sale. I could go on. 0/5.

.

This is not the first problem I've had with this company, and I'm assuming it won't be the last.

The problem was ongoing, so I cannot give an exact date. It started near the beginning of May and CS just hold of me today, May 30. Right on time for the month-long wait.

May 3, 2026
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

I am very worried about this company

I am very worried about this company. I am trying to publish a book with them but the proof copies were faulty. I have submitted multiple requests to them to ask if they can resolve this before i order more copies, but they are completely unresponsive despite 5 or 6 support requests. It is as if they have gone into a vapour and I do not know how or if to go forward with them after two weeks of no response despite having submitted multiple simple requests about the poor quality of their work. No way to contact them and feeling very frustrated with this. No way to grow their business. I am beginning to think they are having financial problems and about to go bust due to total lack of response and poor results so far. There has got to be a better way of publishing a book than dealing with these people. I hope they can get their act together in the future.

May 12, 2026
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Bigots Work Here

To uphold bigotry and keep employees enrolled who lie online about an author to keep their books out of publication is abhorrent. Your company should be ashamed.

October 23, 2025
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Lightning Source Horrendous Customer Service

I wish somehow publishers could gather enough influence to get Lightning Source’s attention to the horrendous customer service, the lack of response to the needs of those it’s in business within. There is no phone call service. And email takes days to receive a response. Now with e-commerce options for customers to drop ship a single book there is no way for the customer to get help with an order. I guess they figured out that this business model of limited customer help is cost effective. But we’re looking for other print options.

August 22, 2025
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Ingram Content Group (Lightning Source) Has Increasingly Terrible Customer Service

Years ago, I joined what used to be called Lightning Source Inc. (LSI)—a company that was later integrated with Ingram Content Group—to ensure all my author's books would have the opportunity to be available through bookstores worldwide, including Amazon. Their service was quite good for a while; although, I don't recall for how long. All I know is that, ever since Ingram took over, that service has gone downhill every single year. This year has been the worst so far.

My company's latest book project, for a brand-new author of ours, has experienced so many inexcusable, unbelievable issues this time around, that it is shocking. It has been so shocking, in fact, that I am compelled to write this one-star review. I wish I could give Ingram Content Group ZERO stars; that's how terrible they have been this time around.

There isn't enough room in this little box for me to fully detail all the crap Ingram's Lightning Source has put us through over the past couple of months, so I'll try to just stick to the worst of the worst points. Unbelievably terrible customer service.

For starters, I uploaded my author's book files to Lightning Source several weeks ago. Normally, it takes only 2 to 3 business days for them to respond with the soft proofs for me to approve so that I can order the hard proof for shipment to my proofreader. Well, a week went by without any response. I tried calling customer support to question the delay. But guess what? When you call their toll-free number (the only number that is available to call), you receive only a voice message that states they no longer answer the phone; they prefer, instead, to deal with clients by email.

So, I emailed once, twice, maybe even three times. FINALLY, I heard back from Naresha. She informed me that "the book and metadata information are being reviewed by the Catalog Integrity team" and gave this as the reason for the delay. But she could not (would not?) provide any further details.

When the Catalog Integrity team FINALLY approved the book to move forward with the proofing process, I asked Naresha to explain why there had been a more than two-week-long delay. Her only response to me was, "Please be advised that the Catalog Integrity team is separate from our Client Support team. That team does not share their decisions or reasons with us about this matter."

HUH? You put us behind schedule by over two weeks, and you won't even provide a proper explanation as to why? This is unacceptable.

Then there was the whole back and forth regarding which courier they would use to send our hard proof to Canada. I know, from much experience with Ingram Lightning Source, that certain couriers are terrible to use because our books always get stuck at customs for several days whenever these couriers are used. But rather than put my mind at ease by using the courier of my choice, Naresha informed me that I had zero say in the matter. They will use whatever courier they choose to use. Too bad for me.

FINALLY, we received the hard proof. I had been expecting the usual perfect bound print-on-demand hard proof that we've always received in the past. Instead, what did we receive? We received a complete garbage copy of a book with the back cover copy completely squished over to the left, almost running off the page, and the spine held together by a big piece of white tape or something. ??? ARE YOU EVEN KIDDING ME AT THIS POINT, LIGHTNING SOURCE?

It is so clear to me that Ingram Content Group (e.g., Lightning Source, IngramSpark, and all its other subsidiaries) don't give a crap about their customers. They know they don't have to care. We're all forced to use them because Ingram's bookstore database is proprietary and the only way that we can get our books into all the bookstores worldwide. The company clearly takes full advantage of this opportunity to provide garbage service, knowing full well we'll keep coming back for more abuse from them.

I truly look forward to the day when a strong competitor arrives on the marketplace and takes back all of Ingram's business by actually providing proper support to people. My author is so distraught right now. This is her first book. She was hoping to have a book launch in March. That has now been moved to April due to Ingram's delays. And now that she's seen the garbage hard proof Ingram produced for her, she's terrified of investing any money into ordering extra books for her launch. I have blind copied her on every single correspondence I've had with Ingram regarding her book, and she is appalled by what a bumpy ride this has been, filled with hundreds of excuses that are never properly explained.

I'm so disgusted by you, Ingram. I'm so disappointed in you. This review doesn't even begin to describe how appalled and offended my entire team (and my authors) are by your company right now.

February 18, 2025
Unprompted review

Is this your company?

Claim your profile to access Trustpilot’s free business tools and connect with customers.

Get free account

The Trustpilot Experience

Anyone can write a Trustpilot review. People who write reviews have ownership to edit or delete them at any time, and they’ll be displayed as long as an account is active.

Companies can ask for reviews via automatic invitations. Labeled Verified, they’re about genuine experiences.

Learn more about other kinds of reviews.

We use dedicated people and clever technology to safeguard our platform. Find out how we combat fake reviews.

Learn about Trustpilot’s review process.

Here are 8 tips for writing great reviews.

Verification can help ensure real people are writing the reviews you read on Trustpilot.

Offering incentives for reviews or asking for them selectively can bias the TrustScore, which goes against our guidelines.

Take a closer look