Pros
The people I worked with on a day-to-day basis were wholly wonderful. There was a real feeling of community and the work felt fulfilling.
Cons
There is a real problem with upper management. It seems like nobody really knows what the company is doing long-term, and right now it seems like they're really flailing, trying to survive after some disastrous decisions.
For example, there was a push to build products beyond the core idea of the company, like Wordpress plugins and themes. This lack of focus came to the forefront when we fully dropped them after years of work had been done. Then, when work was being done on a core feature of the company, the publisher and internal dashboard, the teams were forced to launch before the product was anywhere close to being ready, frustrating the publishers that were being prompted to start using it. None of this was helped by the fact that they laid off the entire QA team, so the engineers were not able to get feedback from people who really knew how to test software, not just from employees mentioning when something was wrong or felt off.
Additionally to this, it really felt like the C-suite was incredibly out-of-touch with what mattered to their employees.