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Blast off: South Australian space startup Fleet sends nanosatellites into orbit in global IoT mission

Aussie space startup Fleet has sent its first two microsatellites into orbit, with the help of New Zealand space craft company Rocket Lab.
Fleet CEO Flavia Tata Nardini
Fleet co-founder and chief executive Flavia Tata Nardini. Source: Supplied.

Aussie space tech startup Fleet has finally sent its first two microsatellites into orbit, with the help of US and New Zealand spacecraft company Rocket Lab.

The launch in Auckland yesterday was Rocket Labโ€™s first commercial take off, with the rocket โ€” aptly named Itโ€™s Business Timeโ€” deploying six small satellites into space, including Fleet Spaceโ€™s Proxima I and II.

Fleet was founded in 2015, by space engineer and chief executive Flavia Tata Nardini, along with Matthew Tetlow and Matt Pearson.

In April last year, it raised $5 million in a Series A round, led by Blackbird Ventures and also including Atlassian co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes, Earth Space Robotics and Silicon Valleyโ€™s Horizon Partners.

Since then, the startup has grown to 20 people, opened offices in Europe and Los Angeles, and opened its nanosatellite ground station and mission control centre in Adelaide.

It has also forged partnerships with Seattle spacecraft company Spaceflight and Elon Muskโ€™s SpaceX.

Through launching nanosatellites โ€” roughly the size of a shoebox and weighing less than 10kgย โ€” into space, Fleet Space is striving to create a global Internet of Things (IoT) network to connect sensors across the world. Ultimately, this connectivity could improve efficiencies in areas such as agriculture, mining and logistics.

Fleet had originally scheduled to launch its first two nanosatellites, Centauri I and II, on a SpaceX rocket in February this year, but when the launch was delayed, Tata Nardini says the team chose to start commercialising their product anyway.

The startup’s Portal product is connected through existing satellites, and allows clients to โ€œconnect sensors at a very low costโ€, Tata Nardini says.

Soon, the sensors were being sold all over the world.

โ€œIt was unexpected because our satellites were not in space yet, but it was great to start entering the market โ€” we could do what we wanted to do.โ€

Already, customers are demanding more services โ€” proof, Tata Nardini says, IoT has changed the way clients are operating their businesses as โ€œthey need more services dedicated to IoT, with lower costsโ€.

In September, Tata Nardini found out Rocket Lab had space available, and the team started preparing again.

The first two satellites took more than a year to build, Tata Nardini says. This time โ€œwe built the satellites, had licencing in place, did all the testing, all within one-and-a-half monthsโ€, she says.

โ€œItโ€™s incredibly crazy, but thatโ€™s what new space is โ€” itโ€™s very fast,โ€ she adds.

Fleet may have reached a milestone, but Tata Nardini is not resting on her laurels. The startup is overseeing two more launches within the next two weeks, before starting to scale up and โ€œattack the market quickerโ€, she says.

โ€œIโ€™m not going to take a break, not this year,โ€ she says.

The nano space race

Although Rocket Lab has got a Fleet Space satellite into orbit before SpaceX could, Tata Nardini stresses the two are very different companies, with different priorities.

Rocket Lab is dedicated entirely to getting nanosatellites and microsatellites into space. Theyโ€™re relatively small rockets, but with high-frequency launches.

The New Zealand company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the US parent company, has a licence to launch up to 120 times next year.

โ€œTheyโ€™re catered to new types of satellites, and to new space,โ€ Tata Nardini says.

This all leads to a better customer journey, she adds. If Rocket Lab provides a good experience to Fleet, getting more satellites into orbit quickly, then Fleet can start providing a better experience for its own users.

โ€œItโ€™s a chain that has to move fast,โ€ she says. IoT technology is moving so quickly, that โ€œif we have to wait a year โ€ฆ we miss itโ€, she adds.

โ€œItโ€™s a kind of bottleneck that weโ€™re trying to unlock,โ€ she says,

Running any startup is complicated, but โ€œspace startups are double complicatedโ€, Tata Nardini says.

While on the one hand, the challenges of understanding your customers, securing funding and trying to scale are similar, itโ€™s also something of a niche.

โ€œYou have to go on top of a rocket to reach space,โ€ she says. โ€œEither youโ€™re the one building the rocket or you have to wait for someone else.โ€

Often this means โ€œyou have to wait months to demonstrate what youโ€™re doingโ€, which leads to the biggest problem of all, according to Tata Nardini, which is โ€œto get into revenue before your space infrastructure is thereโ€.

However, โ€œlikely this is going to be unlocked by quicker access to spaceโ€, she adds.

The journey to space is not an easy one, but if Tata Nardini has one piece of advice for other startup founders looking to embark upon their own mission, itโ€™s just to keep moving.

โ€œFind a way to go fastย โ€” try things, get to space fast, get to revenue fast,โ€ she says.

โ€œReach your customers as soon as possible,โ€ she adds. โ€œAnything that can get you off the ground, go for it.โ€

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