Great culture and flexibility - Head of Acquisition ProWritingAid Employee Review

4.0
Feb 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Allow a lot of flexibility with work, being a remote-only company - Great people. Everyone is collaborative and friendly. - Fulfilling work. People really care about helping creative writers, and there are thoughtful discussions about what would be helpful vs intrusive.

Cons

Not many! - As with small tech companies, there is quite a lot of pivoting/changing direction, that may not be suited to everyone. - There's lots of trust/autonomy given, which is a good thing, but not much formalized training/heavy direction, so may be less suitable if it's your first job.

Explore other reviews about ProWritingAid

5.0
Oct 29, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

After years of being overworked, underpaid, and under-appreciated, I made the leap to go fully remote and work as a full-time contractor for ProWritingAid in 2020. It was the best decision I could've made for my career, my family, and my overall well-being. They're a genuinely amazing company to work for. They've mastered the true remote culture, with employees in multiple time zones and continents. Communication, transparency, and trust are top-tier. The flexibility allows for a fantastic work-life balance, especially when managing familial responsibilities. I haven't had a case of the "Sunday Scaries" since joining this company, which is a true testament to the type of employer they are. I couldn't recommend them more.

Cons

As a US-based employee, figuring out benefits and shifting gears with paying quarterly estimated taxes will be the biggest hurdle. I'm privileged to be covered by my spouse's health insurance, so that hasn't been an issue for me. However, with the ever-rising cost of healthcare in the US, that can be a detractor for others.

5.0
Feb 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Autonomy - Nice mix of leaders setting OKRS and teams owning execution with various formal and informal touchpoints 2. Users first - Always a large bias to what the user (writer) would want as CEO is a writer 3. Experiment culture - It's ok to fail here and we use a solid Product Operating Model including evidence based development 4. No Asswholes - Jerks do not seem to be tolerated

Cons

1. Remote work can get quite boring - except when life is full on and this becomes a huge work life balance advantage 2. Similar to the above, limited opportunity for a cheeky Nandos on a Thursday or to chat breeze

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