Pros
Smart, talented team members and a lot of good people to work with day to day.
Strong learning experience if you want exposure to a wide range of work quickly.
Opportunity for some remote work during the week.
This role may work well for someone who is comfortable with high intensity, frequent oversight, and a workplace culture where questioning the process is not especially rewarded.
Cons
The role can expand well beyond what the title and job description suggests, without a clear ceiling.
Scope and expectations can grow faster than authority, compensation, and practical bandwidth.
Heavy approval and revision loops can slow output, while expectations continue to stack.
Priorities can shift quickly, and there is not always a clear trade off process for what gets deprioritized when new work is added.
A large amount of the role involves invisible labor that's not obvious from the job description: follow-up, approvals, revisions, formatting, strategy and coordination, heavy task tracking, and constant context switching.
Leadership is heavily fixated on to image, brand control, and doing things "the right way," even when it creates unnecessary drag.
Standards are high, but at times they can feel more performative than practical.
The environment can feel highly controlled and micro-managed, with limited autonomy for a role that is expected to produce a lot.
If you are highly attuned to power dynamics, mixed messaging, or the gap between expectations and reality, this environment may become frustrating quickly.