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Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Space Companies Are Desperately Seeking New Talent

SpaceX Starbase staff As space companies scale up, they are often chasing the same small number of “unicorn” workers while missing out on talent in adjacent industries. (credit: SpaceX) Turnover and retention: an unspoken cost center affecting space companies by Joseph Horvath Monday, January 22, 2024 Bookmark and Share The space industry has two major pain points, and they are not related to systems, capabilities, or public excitement about the future. The biggest hurdles facing companies today are workforce availability and capital resources. While slightly different challenges, they are related in how they impact a space company’s ability to grow and remain competitive. Companies and agencies are all vying for the same, limited piece of the talent pie. Everybody wants a unicorn, regardless of whether they can afford it or even find it. In the current environment, smart choices made in hiring and workforce development can aid the capital crunch by supporting affordable talent acquisition, decreasing turnover, motivating employees, and retaining experienced problems solvers. The bottom line is that people are the greatest strength to the space industry, yet overlooked in comparison to technology or systems. Source. Train. Retain. Upskill. Those four words that should be a mantra of the growing space industry looking to solve the workforce challenge. Yet, companies and agencies are all vying for the same, limited piece of the talent pie. Everybody wants a unicorn, regardless of whether they can afford it or even find it. Today’s space workforce conditions make reducing turnover and retraining of adjacent industry talent top priorities: As of 2021, there were about 2.1 million people in the aerospace and defense workforce in the US alone. Only 17% of the space agency’s workforce is under 35. The “great resignation” is seeing a disproportionate loss of Boomers leaving the workforce, along with their extensive knowledge and experience. At four-year universities and colleges, engineering student enrollments have dropped by about 100,000 from 2017 to 2022. Turnover can cost US organizations upwards of 213% of the lost employee’s salary. 87% of US employers said that improving retention is a critical priority for their organization. The loss of Boomers is not being met by Millennials or Gen Z because of a few reasons: Lack of interest in STEM careers and studies; Higher frequency of job changes throughout working years; and Lack of individual employee investment in training and upskilling by organizations. What is the true cost of turnover or lack of retention? Studies show that the costs to replace an employee range from one to two times the annual average salary. The average salary for the space industry is $125,000, which equates to $125,000 to $250,000 per employee lost. This is compounded by the fact that most companies are searching for “unicorns”: people with levels of skill and experience that rarely exist, causing them to focus on a tiny pool of candidates. That is a wonderful position for seasoned space professionals who are open to being poached back and forth across the community, but not a model that can be sustained, or one that adds talent to the industry. The cost in time and resources spent chasing the “perfect hire” is significant. There is a better way. A new paradigm for training and sourcing: expand the pie To expand the talent pool, the space industry should be looking at other industries to find new talent. There exist large groups of untapped talent across the aviation, auto, software and other well-developed industries. This skilled talent in adjacent industries, ripe for a transition to space, brings with them experience and knowledge to help streamline and improve company performance. pie chart The key is providing the necessary outreach, pathways for entry, and baseline training on space operations and astronautics during onboarding. This allows them to quickly add value, enabling them to best communicate within and between teams, understand the organization’s mission and goals, and the needs and requirements of users and customers. Continuous, properly spaced professional development through upskilling creates a long-term pathway of success within the organization. Continual professional development: onboarding and upskill training Regardless of where talent comes from, there is a lack of onboarding and upskill training being offered by companies. One reason for this is that until the past decade, space was largely dominated by government organizations and their supporting prime contractors. It was a largely static industry from a workforce perspective, with a slow, predictable growth rate. There exist large groups of untapped talent across the aviation, auto, software and other well-developed industries. This skilled talent in adjacent industries, ripe for a transition to space, brings with them experience and knowledge to help streamline and improve company performance. The commercial space boom has changed the environment drastically and requires companies to continuously work to develop and evolve the knowledge and skills of their staff to remain competitive. Organizations that invest in their people will remain at the cutting edge of best practices, technology, policy, law, and other important areas. Simply put, a small investment in training improves communication, performance, creativity, and, most importantly, business outcomes. The cost of turnover can be significantly reduced through better sourcing models and the addition of professional development within your space company. The best part is that by utilizing this method, simply preventing just one employee from departing pays for an entire year of a training program for the whole company—the return on investment is substantial. Stop spending time chasing unicorns. Expand your talent pool through more efficient sourcing. Keep your top talent by investing in their future from onboarding and beyond. These are simple measures that reduce overall cost, increase performance, and improve your competitive position. Technology is great, but people are the strength that sets a company apart from the pack over the long term. Joseph Horvath is president and CEO of Nova Space. He has two decades of experience in space and astronautics with an extensive network across industry and DoD. While serving as a Marine Corps officer, he was the Service’s Senior Space Operations Officer, leading professional development, training, education, policy, and exercise design. His educational background includes a BS in Astrophysics and MS in Space Systems Operations, as well as being a former DARPA Fellow. Joseph brings to his role extensive leadership and management experience with a focus on agile practices and developing successful teams.

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