Pros
YouGov has a genuinely interesting product at its core — global data and research that actually matters to clients. That gives the work a sense of purpose that's hard to fake. The people are, by and large, smart and collaborative. You'll find colleagues who care about what they do, and that makes a real difference day to day. There's also meaningful regional exposure here, particularly if you're based in APAC. The scope of work crosses markets and functions in ways that build your skills faster than a more siloed organisation would. Flexible working is largely respected, and the company talks a good game on culture — and mostly means it. On leadership, there are early signs of stabilisation. The appointment of James Davies as CFO brings serious external credibility — an ACA-qualified accountant with senior finance roles at Monzo and OVO Energy behind him, and a track record in scaling digital businesses. After a period of significant turbulence, having someone with that kind of rigor focused on operational efficiency and margin feels like a meaningful step in the right direction.
Cons
The last year or two has been turbulent. Leadership changes at the top have created uncertainty that filters down, and there have been periods where strategic direction felt unclear. Communication from the centre during these times left something to be desired. Compensation sits below market median in some functions and levels — this isn't always addressed proactively, and high performers can quietly start to feel undervalued before anything is done about it. Career pathing can also be opaque depending on your team. Resourcing is lean. Workloads can be heavy and headcount decisions lag behind business need.