Pros
- As everyone else has said before, great culture and great people. Ever work at a job with sketchy/snarky/cliquey coworkers? For the most part, there was no one I encountered from any department that was like this. - Frequent career development opportunities - Perks like free food, coffee, company outings (depending on your role you may not always be able to attend), tuition reimbursement - Open door policy with management. Have a great idea to improve processes? Everyone is open to hearing your thoughts. - Company is rapidly growing, but they're working to keep the family feeling in the office and working on making new people feel welcome - Their office is in a safe area in Playa Vista, and a rapidly growing one as well. Close enough to good places to eat, food trucks around the corner between 11 and 2, a big park down the street, and a covered parking structure with a car wash if you choose to pay for one. - There were some work from home opportunities when I was there, not sure if they still offer this on a case by case basis - Pros outnumber the cons
Cons
- Depending on your department, hitting goals can be stressful (along with the work itself). Many roles are client-facing, so be prepared to put your customer service face on even if you're not in the customer service department. - Depending on your department, unlimited paid vacation is not always unlimited due to staffing needs/needing to hit goals, so you need to get someone to cover your shifts sometimes or trade shifts with others. This isn't the end of the world, just takes more work. - And again, depending on your department, you may not always be able to participate in company outings or get all of the usual holidays off due to staffing needs (customer support is a 24/7 job). If you want to get a date off or attend a company outing that conflicts with your shift, better request it off quickly and/or work with getting your shift covered. - There is unlimited paid sick time but it was uncomfortable when I called in sick and was sometimes guilt-tripped for abandoning my team. Because of this, many times people would come to work sick and end up leaving before the end of their shift because they couldn't take their sore throat or whatever was ailing them anymore. Not sure if this was to prove to management that they actually were sick (instead of calling in and have people wonder if they were just playing hooky) or if we've been brainwashed as a society that missing school and/or work to take care of your health is bad, so people will come in and try regardless. For a company where the happiness of employees is valued, please don't guilt trip employees who need to take a day off for their health, whether physical or mental. - Pay could be better, but it's a growing startup so the hope is that base pay will improve for all. - This isn't quite a con (it makes sense why they do this) but more of a warning for those that hire in to one department and expect to seamslessly transfer to another department after they have some ChowNow experience. Not that it's impossible, but don't expect to hire in to one of the "easier" departments like CS and then transfer to Finance/Engineering/etc. within a few months. They hired you for what they hired you for, and they expect you to stay there and perform well for a while before you run off for another position. When you do well and express interest in transferring, you are supported in the interview process.