SpaceX has nearly
10,000 employees as it ramps up its Starlink rollout, court documents show
Court filings show
SpaceX has more than 9,500 employees on its payroll.
SpaceX, which Musk
founded in 2002, says it is the largest satellite operator in the world.
There are more
than 100 vacancies advertised on its website.
Elon Musk's
aerospace company SpaceX is nearing a 10,000-strong workforce as it ramps
up its Starlink rollout.
In a court filing
on February 26 as part of the company's battle with the Department of
Justice over alleged hiring discrimination, SpaceX said it "has over
9,500 employees on its payroll." It has more than 100 vacancies listed
on its website.
In the US alone,
SpaceX has staff at least 10 sites across five states.
SpaceX, which Musk
founded in 2002, is the operator of the world's largest commercial
satellite constellation. Data from a huge COVID-19 study the company took
part in suggests its workforce is young and overwhelmingly male.
Around 4,300
employees signed up to give monthly blood samples so they could be tested
for antibodies from April 2020 onwards. The study sample was 84.3% male
with a median age of 32 - although the age range spanned from 18 to 71.
SpaceX appears to
be a popular place to work overall. Part of the reason is due to the perks
employees are entitled to, from in-house massage therapists to private
talks by celebrities.
Yet, Musk's
employees still live in fear of his ever-changing moods, according to
Vanity Fair's Nick Bilton. Staff told the publication they felt nervous
about Musk's Twitter habit and closely watched his mood so they could use
it to their advantage.
"On [SpaceX]
launch days, you have everyone at Tesla tuned in to see if the launch is
successful, not because we are vested in the rockets, but because it
directly impacts Elon's mood for the next few days," a Tesla executive
told Vanity Fair. "If there was a failure on a launch, there'd be hell
to pay; you didn't want to have a phone call set up with Elon
afterward."
It was recently
reported that in SpaceX's earliest days, rocket engineers were occasionally
left to starve due to food shipment failures, back when they were living on
a Pacific Island to prepare for a launch, leading them to mutiny.
"We were just
wild animals on the island, waiting for food," Ed Thomas, a SpaceX
technician at the time, told the senior space editor at Ars Technica, Eric
Berger.
In February,
SpaceX vice president Hans Koenigsmann, who was Musk's seventh hire at the
company, announced plans to retire. He told staff he'd be replaced by
William Gerstenmaier, a former NASA official who joined the space company a
year ago.
The company has
grown massively over the past 19 years. "In 2002, SpaceX basically
consisted of carpet and a mariachi band. That was it," Musk said.
The company had
160 employees in November 2005. Prior to February, the last time the
company publicly commented on the size of its workforce was in May 2020,
when Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX's chief operating officer, said it had around
8,000 staff.
And as the company
grew, employees also grew as professionals, within it. "I worked with
Elon in 2002 when no one knew his name and SpaceX was just founded,"
said former employee, Teresa Tranakas. "Even though I stayed on for a
short period (almost two years), working alongside Elon during those
startup moments taught me valuable business lessons that I apply even to
this day.
Examples of wisdom
she learned from Musk include doing whatever it takes to build a sustainable
business and never accepting that something can't be done.
More than 10 years
later, SpaceX continues to find success after success, especially with the
company's recent valuation shooting to about $74 billion, CNBC reported.
Its exponential
growth has also meant that the company is looking to hire. With hundreds of
vacancies advertised on its site, it looks like Musk is looking to expand
his workforce by huge amounts.
Starlink is
SpaceX's broadband service that beams down internet from satellites
launched into orbit. Since its launch in October last year, it has
accumulated more than 10,000 users worldwide.
Musk also
apparently has ambitious plans to colonize Mars. In December, he told
Mathias Döpfner, the CEO of Insider's parent company, Axel Springer, that
he was selling all his possessions to fund a future colony on Mars.
The aerospace
company is currently at the center of a heated US Department of Justice
(DoJ) investigation into alleged hiring discrimination. In May 2020, a job
applicant filed a complaint alleging SpaceX chose not to hire him because
of his citizenship status. Officials have since expanded the case to look
at SpaceX's wider hiring practices.
But the company
has refused to comply with a subpoena asking for documentation related to
its hiring procedures, saying authorities have given only "the
flimsiest of justifications."
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