Mark said it well "all-wood bows take more care to build, more care to shoot, more care to maintain"
We build both types of bows and depending on where a person is on the evolution of bows, with a few exceptions recommend glass to new guys and "all natural" to more seasoned veterans.
Performance on our Hunter and SoothSayer will run with glass bows and the horn bellied SoothSayer and BushWacker will perform with all but the fastest of the glass and carbon.
With that being said, performance is really not a factor. It's the other stuff that Mark pointed out. When a bowhunter transitions to trad bows from compounds, it's hard sometimes to accept the additional care and feeding that an "all natural" bow requires. I've shot and hunted with them for years and it's second nature to me to unbrace the bow when I rest, to wipe it down when it's wet and to wax it when the water stops beading up.
This year I'm hunting with an Orion curve and it's weird not to unstring it when I'm done hunting. LOL
So if your new, you have a lot of new stuff to learn about shooting the bow and hunting with a trad bow that is different from the compound, so we recommend a glass bow, hopefully our glass bow. LOL
Later for an additional challenge, an "all natural" bow is the next step. Kinda like stepping up to a luxury car.
Then when it's just plain easy hunting and shooting, lets build a selfbow.
That's my approach. Now if you have your heart set on "all natural" out of the gate, we have you covered.
Mike