Pros
If you get the change to work on the London studio it's a nice environment, its right in the middle of Soho, the installations are good and clean. If you have a permanent seat you can keep your attendance flexible and WFH for a day or two a week (for now). IT has always been quick and helpful in my experience. There has been big and interesting projects through the year, and my leads and co-workers have been hard-working and easy going.
Cons
-No paid overtime unless on the weekends with previous approval from management. -Its common to get transferred to a different project without much of a warning, worst I got was on a late friday having to start on monday, there's barely time to complete your current tasks or learn about the new project, which can cause for you to be switching between the two for an undefined amount of time. Sometimes they can also forget to notify your current project or the new that you are being moved over. -Pipeline is a mess and I've been told it's been for a while. There's few people that really understand how it works beside the basics, some projects don't even use it, although that is not better on the long-term. We have Shotgun but it's barely used, most is done through instant messaging, calls and a never-ending chain of emails. -Its nice they usually give some training time (specially needed for the pipeline) but most times its you watching outdated tutorials and being assigned a "buddy" that may not have time for you as they have to work as well, neither can actually train you well enough anyway when you don't exactly know what role you'll be taking or for what project, which happens way more than it should. -If you don't have a permanent seat good luck getting in the studio, they closed a building so they can't actually have everyone in, but everyday I could look around and point at several empty seats while there's been people asking for one for months.