Pros
I've been with Go Digital for over five years now, and the fact that I'm still here says more than any single line in this review could. In an industry where people jump ship every couple of years, staying this long was a conscious choice and one I'd make again. The biggest thing for me has been the growth. I came in and got handed real responsibility early, and that never stopped. I've moved into roles I genuinely didn't expect to reach this quickly, and at no point did I feel like I'd hit a ceiling or was just coasting. If you're someone who wants to keep learning and being challenged rather than settling into a comfortable rut, this is a good place for that. The learning curve is steep in the best way, and the firm tends to back people who show they're willing to step up. Leadership is a huge part of why I've stayed. They lead with trust instead of control they give you the space to actually own your work rather than micromanaging every decision. When you're trusted like that, you tend to rise to it, and I've seen that play out across a lot of people here, not just myself. The leadership team is also transparent about where the company is going, which makes you feel like you're part of something rather than just an employee clocking in. The culture flows naturally from all of that. People are easy to work with, genuinely collaborative, and there's a real sense of mutual respect across teams and levels. It doesn't feel cutthroat or political the way a lot of consulting environments can. When things get busy — and in consulting, they do — having people around you who have your back makes a real difference. The client work deserves a mention too. The projects are varied and substantial, so you're not stuck doing the same thing on repeat. There's always something new to get your teeth into, which keeps the work interesting and keeps you sharp.
Cons
Work-life balance isn't always perfect, and there are busy stretches like anywhere in consulting. For me that trade-off has been worth it, because the growth I've gotten in return more than makes up for it — but if you're chasing a strictly nine-to-five with no busy periods, that's worth knowing going in. As long as the growth is there, I've been fine with it. The other thing is that processes could be tighter. As the firm has grown, some things still run a bit ad-hoc, and coordination between teams can get messy at times — handoffs, internal communication, that kind of thing. It's the natural growing pain of a company that's scaling, and it's nothing dealbreaking, but it's the area I'd most want to see cleaned up. A bit more structure and standardization would go a long way and would make an already strong place even better to work at.