Pros
High level of autonomy and trust, with zero micromanagement (at least in the SBDR team). Strong sense of impact on processes, methodology, and how work is actually done, even within a large organization. Exposure to first-class minds in the tech and open source world, with colleagues who are genuinely collaborative and generous with their time. Opportunity to contribute to a company that actively shapes the future of open source and sets long-term industry direction, rather than just following trends. Fully remote environment that still feels highly connected: collaboration is easy, communication is open, and people are willing to engage deeply. A rigorous and demanding interview process that is intentionally designed to minimize bias and ensure strong alignment with company values, which shows in the quality of people hired.
Cons
Interview process is long - and this goes both in pros and cons. For the interviewed standpoint, it's a "cons" because it means investing a lot of time and energy into something that you don't know if it will pay back. From the team standpoint, it's a way to fully evaluate with the minimum bias people the fit the company value set. The job can be demanding in terms of energy and time, especially in periods of high growth, even though there is flexibility and no strict hour tracking. As a fast-growing company with double-digit revenue growth year-to-year, processes can evolve frequently, which sometimes creates friction or requires constant adaptation. Career paths are flexible and open, but not always immediately clear or linear, requiring a proactive mindset to navigate opportunities.