Pros
During the hiring process, they're keen enough to spot intelligent, kind, hard-working people and bring them onto the team. Most teammates I worked with were a delight—knowledgeable and helpful, knew the fine art of excellent feedback, highly empathetic, and more than willing to help me advance my career. Unfortunately, those people are unable to stand the culture/environment for long; most leave after just a few months. Pay is a little more competitive, especially if you're a remote employee who doesn't live in an expensive metro area. Benefits package is also impressive at first glance... but again, most don't stick around long enough to take advantage of it, as most benefits kick in after the 9-month to 1-year mark.
Cons
TL;DR: Even the most resilient people burn out FAST here. Why? Very little time off. Emotional abuse. Blatant favoritism. CEO possesses little or no empathy, has unrealistic expectations, can't take feedback, and expects everyone's lives to revolve around her company. If they don't change their ways, they're going to drown in lawsuits from employees who suffer work-related mental and physical anguish and disability. Exceedingly high voluntary turnover. Talk a good talk about diversity, equity, and inclusion, but once you're behind the scenes you see they don't walk the walk. CEO regularly throws temper tantrums and berates employees in front of their peers/teammates on Slack, email, Zoom meetings, in person. Who she pretends to be in front of her customers/audience is completely different than who she is behind the scenes. Character assassination of former employees on public Slack channels. Not being a good fit for a company is one thing, but the CEO and her spouse unjustly and cruelly attacked former employees' character and intelligence. Employees are expected to be "coachable," while the executives doing the coaching do not practice ethical, consensual coaching and are unwilling to hear feedback themselves or do introspective work. Promised employees generous paid holidays and PTO, but burned employees out by constantly creating new projects, events, having unrealistic expectations, leading to the vast majority of the team working holidays and enjoying very little time off.