Pros
The product has real potential and can make a meaningful difference for students.
Many employees care deeply about the mission and are committed to helping children learn to read.
There are talented people across teams who want the work to succeed.
Cons
Onboarding and ramp-up for new employees can be challenging. Expectations are often high from the beginning, but supporting structure, documentation, and clearly defined ownership are limited. As a result, new hires may be placed into complex or high-impact work without sufficient context, which increases pressure and risk.
Leadership often feels reactive rather than strategic. Important issues are addressed after they escalate instead of through strong planning, validation, and clear cross-functional ownership.
Role expectations may not always be fully aligned between the hiring process and the actual day-to-day work. In practice, responsibilities can shift significantly based on urgent business needs, which may be frustrating for employees who joined with a different understanding of their primary focus.
Communication can create unnecessary stress, with urgent requests and inconsistent expectations contributing to an anxiety-driven environment.
There is a disconnect between the company’s mission and some business decisions, which can be discouraging for employees who joined because they believed in the broader educational impact.
Roles and responsibilities across product, engineering, data, and measurement are not always clearly aligned, which can make execution inefficient and increase project risk.
Too much depends on individuals stepping in to solve problems quickly, rather than on stable processes and systems that prevent those problems in the first place.