Pros
I feel consistently challenged and engaged by the work. There’s always something meaningful to contribute to. Leadership invites open, honest conversations when something isn’t working. Feedback is taken seriously and followed up on. New ideas are actually implemented. I’ve seen multiple suggestions from teammates evolve into real projects within a few months.
Collaboration across departments is excellent. Marketing, product, and engineering work closely together instead of operating in silos. That collaboration helps everyone see how their work fits into the company’s larger goals.
The leadership does set bold, multi-year goals (e.g. doubled revenue targets, new product verticals) and then backs them with resources.
Strategy isn’t static, but the shifts are usually in response to validated data (metrics, customer feedback, market changes) rather than whim.
Communication is improving: we’ve had more frequent all-hands Q&A sessions, departmental “town halls,” and Slack threads where execs directly respond.
Cons
Because the company is scaling fast, roles sometimes evolve quicker than job descriptions, which can feel murky during transitions.