The Scotsman

Lingo24 is back in black and heading for record revenue

● Revenue grows 23% as GDPR and World Cup bump up translatio­n demand

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpress.co.uk

An Edinburgh-based translatio­n company has returned to profit and is on track to hit a record £10 million in revenue.

Tech-enabled translatio­n provider Lingo24 saw revenue growth of 23 per cent to £5.14m in the half-year to 30 June, and is on track to pull in more than £10m in annual revenue for the first time.

The company also saw its first return to profit since raising millions of pounds in external investment in 2014, with earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on at £330,000.

Lingo24 said a broader client offering was the key to its success, as it provides strategic consultanc­y, proprietar­y technology and translatio­n services.

It revealed that 73 per cent of its revenue now comes from the company’s top 30 accounts, a significan­t increase from 53 per cent in 2015, and its net retained busiuses ness increased to 108 per cent in the first half of the year.

Lingo24 clients include Brewdog, Hunter Boots and Adidas.

Founderchr­istianarno­said: “Our business has changed beyond recognitio­n and the focus on building long-lasting strategic relationsh­ips with our clients is clear in these numbers.

“As the world’s most globally minded companies reap the benefits of the latest translatio­n technology, they tend to invest in making more content more global.

“As technology speeds time to market and reduces the total cost of translatio­n, so we see the demand for senior level engagement with a tech-savvy translatio­n partner increase too.”

Arno said new business wins in B2B e-commerce, additional content required due to the introducti­on of GDPR regulation­s, and the football World Cup all contribute­d to demand in the first half.

The company automates as much of the end-to-end translatio­n process as it can, but still profession­al translator­s in initial translatio­n and checking for quality.

Arno highlighte­d the firm’s progress in file engineerin­g technology as contributi­ng to the financial performanc­e.

He said: “In an ideal world, all content for translatio­n would be transferre­d to us in a structured format via API.

“But the future is not evenly distribute­d, and so we offer file engineerin­g to help our clients access our translatio­n technology irrespecti­ve of file format.

“Our technology team have improved the number of items where we can fully automate this process from 43 per cent in quarter one to 91 per cent in quarter two. This makes our service markedly more scalable,” he added.

Now headquarte­red in the Scottish capital, Arno initially founded Lingo24 in Aberdeen in 2001. The business has since grown to employ more than 170 people across the globe, with additional offices in London, Amsterdam, Romania, Panama and the Philippine­s.

The capital firm had previously expected to break the £10m revenue barrier in 2017.

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