Pros
Most of your coworkers will be genuinely nice people. The pay and compensation here is run by an algorithm, which means that everyone who has your job title has the same compensation, which is usually very fair. Unlimited vacation.
Cons
This is the weakest leadership of any organization that I have been employed by. A lot of people in high positions in the creative marketing department have been there for many, many years and have no relevant background whatsoever in the outside world for their fields or know how to lead teams. Leadership never aligns, so you'll be scrambling a lot of times until the last second to figure things out (on your own). The creative vision is set by testing and creates a hectic and unmanageable work style, you're constantly flexing to the latest data point (this is not the mark of a company that knows who it is or how to deliver a strong message in a cluttered marketplace). Deadlines are consistently unreasonable and it sets the tone for a work environment that gets work done without any regard to quality, you just run out of time. Everything is diluted and what you learn on the job will most likely be what not to do in the outside world. There is a huge level of toxic positivity and you will be spoken to like you're a child. You will spend a lot of time in pointless meetings and building decks that really aren't used for anything. Overall lack of diversity and poor hiring practices. They say they want a diverse workforce, but one look around the office and it's clear that isn't the case. I've also seen women come back from maternity leave completely pushed out of their roles.