Pros
Work-life balance is fantastic in general, although many accounting teams are not supportive of work-from-home or flex time schedules at the manager/director level. On-site gym with classes offered throughout the day. The company has many in-building events involving impressive guest speakers and interesting topics. The culture is collaborative and consensus driven, although this can slow decision making. Employees have several avenues to communicate concerns and, outside specific individual issues, can do so without fear of negative consequences. 30% discount at all retail locations and a free pound of coffee a week, in addition to numerous in-building kitchens which provide free access to Starbucks brewing and espresso equipment and ingredients - even training to use the machines and make drinks is available to all interested.
Cons
Pay is atrocious. This is continuously acknowledged by all employees, and becomes compounded as tenure increases - raises due to internal promotion fall short of offers to external hires. Medical and retirements benefits are only average now, and are no longer something that Starbucks can tout itself as a leader in. Tuition benefits are limited to a first bachelor's degree with no allowances for continuing ed, certifications, or advanced degrees. Parking in the SODO are is terrible and the waitlist for parking the Starbucks garage is several years - even the wait list for the surface parking lot is approximately one year. The career advancement environment is extremely relationship driven - if you don't have a high level of emotional intelligence and ability to leverage mentoring and other methods of building the right relationships, be prepared to be overlooked.