Pros
From the moment I joined, I felt welcomed by my colleagues and leaders. The leadership team at Logic20/20 is not only knowledgeable and experienced, but also genuinely invested in the growth and well-being of their employees - something I will admit, not all employees here may get the opportunity to experience. I feel lucky to live in the Seattle area, where I can go into the office and see our leadership team in-person, whenever I want. It's allowed me several opportunities to casually chat with them, and you can see the genuine authenticity in "practicing what they preach" about our company values. There is also a strong emphasis on professional development and career autonomy here. I've benefited a lot from the learning opportunities I've had access to, but I'll be candid in stating "autonomy is not for the weak-minded." Having autonomy to learn and grow with how I see my career advancing means not always having a written path to follow from management. I have plenty of support and access to tools, sure, but it's on me to be motivated enough to use those things to advance my career. If you're a self-starter, you're going to do so SO well here.
Cons
I don't think my perspective is so much 'biased', as it is 'experienced' in stating that growing pains are just sucky, no matter what company you work for. I've had the privilege to work at some very large companies (cough *fruit stands and shipping giants* cough), but also at the opposite end of the spectrum at startups. Either way you slice it growing pains are just that - painful. Logic seems to be experiencing that now; the change in processes, new leadership moves, adding and subtracting staff, etc. So if you're looking to that established, well-groomed, and perfectly segmented company...this probably isn't the best place for you.