Pros
If you work here: You will really get the chance to dive into interesting work. The company really wants YOU to take the lead (at least in terms of development work), you get a lot of responsibility and opportunity. You'll probably travel. You will probably contribute to things you wouldn't ordinarily be able to contribute to elsewhere like designing projects, business development proposals, strategy development, etc. You will probably feel like you have a lot of say in the work you get to do.
Kontras
What is the cost of that: You will probably break down into tears a number of times in your first few weeks due to the pressure and anxiety you're expected to work under in a toxic work environment. No one will regulate your workload, you'll be your job. If you have too much on your plate, that's no one's fault but your own. You will have no authority to make decisions about the projects or programs you manage. The senior leadership, finance, and contracts departments ultimately make decisions, and involving anyone early in a process to get guidance along the way is a non-starter, don’t expect anyone (especially with contracts and finance) to attend your meetings or answer your questions. So figure it out on your own, but be prepared for everything to change at the last possible moment and have whatever is wrong be entirely your fault. That's the DevTech way. If you grow as a professional, it will be from scars you've endured because, there aren't systems in place to help anyone grow. There is absolutely no mentor-ship. No one, really, no one, has any bandwidth to help anyone else learn something new. Even the practice area directors are all quadruple booked with crap so they don't have time to manage. The CEO is a walking ethics violation. Several times there have been incredibly cringe-worthy comments made on both racist and sexist fronts. Interns are cannon fodder. They exist only so that we don't have to pay full time salaries to qualified individuals. They take on more than they signed on for and are expected to continually say yes because everything is a learning opportunity if you've never done it before.