Pros
tl;dr intentional leadership, intelligent people and thoughtful culture. For the longest time, I didn't think a company like Tailwind existed in Oklahoma City. In fact, I've spent a majority of my career working for companies in Kansas City/Dallas because I thought I needed to look elsewhere to find a place with the capabilities and culture I was looking for. If this sounds like you, I dare you to look into Tailwind and see if you still hold that opinion - I sure don't. Tailwind has shattered my expectations of what an OKC company can and should be. Let me break it down by how I made my decision to join the team: Culture: the culture at Tailwind was defined by the team who lives it out every day. Company values are much more than words on a wall, they impact business strategy, hiring decisions and personal interactions. At Tailwind, culture isn't corporate speak or having a ping-pong table (which they do), it's core to who they are and how they work. Leadership: the co-founders are ex-Google and ex-Merrill Lynch (though, they're so humble that experience would almost never come up in conversation). Again, not your typical OKC co-founders. I feel comfortable sharing my thoughts with anyone on the leadership team - input and feedback are encouraged at every turn. 1:1s with team leads are thoughtful and the conversations are equal parts personal and professional. We are encouraged to grow as employees but also as humans. Balance: Let me share a note that went out to every employee; it does a better job of explaining how Tailwind approaches work/life balance than I can..."When you need to step away, please do it - without having to feel like you need to make that time up. We all get sick, have appointments, car trouble, kid/pets to manage, need a breather, tornadoes to duck, etc., from time to time. It's life. And we're more fulfilled and produce better work when our lives are in order." Wow.
Cons
Structure, process and instructions can be loosely defined. The team moves quickly, so retros, look-backs and repeatable processes can be overlooked.