Weekend Herald

‘You don’t go to Mars working 8-5’

Peter Beck on bullying claims, making 100 staff millionair­es

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‘You don’t go to Mars working eight to five, Monday to Friday,” Rocket Lab founder Peter Beck says. “You can’t take on the likes of SpaceX working eight to five.”

The CEO is responding to a recent allegation that staff are working “silly hours”, leading to a number of “ragequitti­ng incidents”, which emerged after the Employment Relations Authority ordered Rocket Lab to pay $98,000 to an engineer who was hired in early 2018 then sacked within a year.

Rocket Lab said the dismissal was for negligent record-keeping, noncomplia­nce with engineerin­g processes and other serious breaches of its policies. The ERA ruled the company had abused its power, breaching good faith by not offering remediatio­n.

“Rocket Lab makes no apology for being a hard, fast environmen­t,” Beck says. “I’m incredibly proud of the culture we have here. It is a very respectful culture where everybody has each other’s back. And, you know, everybody works hard.

“To put what we’ve created into context: there is only one other company that’s like it in the world. And that is Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

“So what we’ve achieved as a company is just incredible. And it just takes an incredibly passionate and dedicated workforce to achieve that.

“You can’t take on the likes of SpaceX working eight to five.”

You’re probably starting to get an idea of what the founder thinks of a traditiona­l working week.

Beck has also demanded high performanc­e. In December, he told a Blackbird Ventures podcast that in the rocket-launch business, underperfo­rmers had to go.

“People who just have not managed to reach the bar — you have to take action and that is an incredibly unpleasant thing. But you just have to otherwise the company will die.”

Rocket Lab told the ERA in 2019, following the 2018 firing, that it had bolstered its HR team.

100 millionair­es

Last month, an anonymous staffer told BusinessDe­sk the prospect of an employee being granted Rocket Lab shares was “a carrot which they would dangle in front of people to get them working silly hours” and that stock was in fact “only for the favourites”.

Beck says the equity scheme is broad-based, merit-based and goes far beyond a token couple of shares.

“To date, over 400 staff have participat­ed in the staff equity scheme. This is where we take the high-performing staff, and [give] them equity in the company,” he says. “So during the IPO, there is going to be a significan­t employee windfall.”

Rocket Lab has about 600 staff, and is on a hiring drive that will bring its total complement to close to 700; around two-thirds work in NZ, the balance in the US and Canada.

The 400 with equity are a mix of past and present staff. Beck says in each case allocation­s were performanc­e-based (a contrast to the usual startup model that sees first-on staff receive stock, and the tap simply turned off for later hires).

The founder says hefty rewards are in the offing if Rocket Lab lists on the Nasdaq at its anticipate­d US$4.1 billion ($5.9b) valuation. More than 3000 investors from NZ alone will be onboard for the listing, expected before the end of September.

A successful listing would mean more than 100 Rocket Lab employees would own stock worth more than $1 million, and 180 would have a holding worth more than $500,000.

Spending the US$750m

As the Herald reported this week, a regulatory filing revealed Beck will be able to redeem up to US$30m when Rocket Lab hits the Nasdaq (in a reverse-listing via a merger with blank-cheque or “special purpose acquisitio­n company” Vector Acquisitio­n). But he will still hold 13.1 per cent of voting stock with 54.5m shares worth about US$564m.

A clutch of Silicon Valley venture capitalist­s will own most of the company, and the Australian Government’s Future Fund will retain a 10.2 per cent stake (our government’s Super Fund passed on an early opportunit­y to invest).

A number of early backers including Lockheed Martin, ACC’s investment arm and Sir Stephen Tindall are set to retain some of their shares but fall below the 5 per cent disclosure threshold (Tindall declined to comment; ACC has yet to respond to questions about its preand-post Nasdaq listing holdings). Vector will also be under 5 per cent.

All up, the Nasdaq listing will boost Rocket Lab’s cash balance from US$48m to about US$750m.

Beck says part of the money will go to expanding Rocket Lab’s Space Systems division — the wing of the company that makes satellites and spacecraft. The unit has already landed two high-profile Nasa contracts — one to ferry a satellite into lunar orbit later this year as a warmup to resuming crewed missions to the Moon, the other to design and construct two Rocket Lab satellites that will be delivered, by Nasa rocket, into an orbit around Mars in 2024 to study the Red Planet’s atmosphere.

Then there’s Beck’s passion project. A private Rocket Lab mission to Venus in 2023. That mission is to validate whether possible traces of phosphine in the planet’s clouds — suggested by observatio­ns from Earth — exist or not.

“And the reason why that’s important is that, currently, our only understand­ing of the ability to produce phosphine is organic symbiosis. So: life.

“For me, the chance of actually answering one of the biggest questions in the universe — are we the only life form? — is just too alluring.”

Taking on Space X

Beyond Space Systems, another big chunk of the Nasdaq money is earmarked for developing Rocket Lab’s much larger Neutron rocket, a crew-capable launch vehicle that will be able to carry a payload of up to 8 tonnes (the Electron tops out around 300kg). All going well, the Neutron will first lift off in 2024.

“Currently, there is only one regularly-reusable launch vehicle flying in this particular payload class. That is, SpaceX’s Falcon 9.

“The Neutron offers an opportunit­y for customers who sometimes have competing satellite platform to Starlink [also owned by Elon Musk]; it gives them an alternativ­e to access to space.

“And if we’re really about growing the space economy to a US$1.4 trillion industry by 2030, it requires more than just one launch provider.”

The Neutron is certainly front-andcentre of Rocket Lab’s financial projection­s, which forecast its revenue to nearly double to US$450m in 2024 as the company makes its first serious profit (US$119) as it tracks toward a US$505m operating profit on US$1.57b revenue by 2027.

Beck also reveals a third use for the listing bounty. “There’s a number of acquisitio­n targets we’re pursuing.”

The military rationale

Rocket Lab recently ran into Green Party flak for launching the “Gunsmoke-J” satellite for the US Army’s Space Missile Command — part of a programme to develop systems to better target missiles.

Beck reiterates where his company draws the line: “We don’t launch weapons,” he says.

His company won’t launch operationa­l military satellites, but it will launch research-based birds that could lead to military applicatio­ns.

The Gunsmoke-J briefing for Space Minister Stuart Nash released to the Weekend Herald by the NZ Space Agency under the Official Informatio­n Act said, “The US Army has stated that this satellite will not be utilised for operations . . . They have confirmed it will remain a science and technology demonstrat­ion over its lifetime.”

Beck is not apologetic about the fact his company launches satellites for so many branches of the US military, and that key early funding came from a wing of the US Department of Defence known as Darpa (the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency).

Military business features strongly in Rocket Lab’s Nasdaq listing presentati­on, which says its coming Neutron rocked will be “tailored for commercial and DoD [US Department of Defence] constellat­ion launches”.

“Part of our business is to launch defence payloads. And we’ve been super clear about this from day one,” Beck says.

“And the New Zealand Government has an incredibly robust framework. I mean, it’s the only framework that I know of that requires ministeria­l sign-off for each individual payload.

“We’re not going to launch contentiou­s things. It’s not what the company is about. When you walk in the door, you read the sign, ‘We go to space to improve life on Earth’. And that’s really the mandate of the company.

“But the reality is that just about every piece of space infrastruc­ture is in some way connected to defence, whether it be GPS or weather.”

Neutron’s US focus

Rocket Lab’s new, much larger rocket will launch from the company’s recently completed Launch Complex 2 at Nasa’s Wallops Island facility in Virginia.

“The Neutron will initially launch out of the United States for industrial base reasons,” Beck says.

“To give you a sense of the scale, if we took all the liquid oxygen that’s produced in New Zealand, we’d only fill half the tank, let alone all the other kind of logistics that are associated with these very, very large launch vehicles.”

Is there scope down the track for the Neutron to launch in New Zealand?

“Never say ‘never’,” Beck says. With its corporate headquarte­rs in Los Angeles, along with its largest manufactur­ing complex, its pending Nasdaq listing and its plan to launch its new rocket from Virginia, is Rocket Lab leaving NZ behind?

“We made a very strategic commitment to launch electron from New Zealand because we can achieve the launch frequencie­s that’s very hard to achieve in other places,” Beck says. “We’ve made tremendous investment­s here, both in facilities and personnel. So I don’t see us wiping those investment­s away. There’s a tremendous strength of having operations in New Zealand and . . . operations in the US.”

More local investment is under way. Since opening its Mission Control and launch assembly in Mt Wellington in 2018, Rocket Lab has leased two additional sites to take its total manufactur­ing footprint in Auckland to 12,000sq m.

When the Weekend Herald visited this week, the assembly floor was crowded with five Electron rockets under assembly for Earth imaging company BlackSky. Rocket Lab is now eyeing the adjacent building occupied by 2 Cheap Cars, whose lease is winding down. The company also recently expanded Launch Complex 1 at Mahia.

More broadly, Beck hopes Kiwis will share in his company’s Nasdaq success, and be proud of Rocket Lab’s achievemen­ts.

While low-key compared to SpaceX owner Elon Musk, Beck doesn’t underplay his company’s achievemen­ts, either.

“Not only have we created this very valuable company that’s about to list on the Nasdaq, we’ve created an entire industry in New Zealand,” Beck says.

“To build a multibilli­on-dollar company is hard. To do it in space is hard squared. So I hope all New Zealanders share in the success of the company.”

Paying it forward

Beck has already taken some money out of the business. In March 2019, he sold US$10m worth of shares to US venture capital company Greensprin­g.

Some of that has gone to backing Kiwi startups, including Halter, the company founded by former Rocket Lab engineer Craig Piggott, which is on a hiring drive to increase staff from 60 to 115 as it makes the first deployment­s of its smart-cow collars to Waikato farms; HeartLab, an earlystage Auckland company that’s using AI to better analyse cardiac scans; and Astrix Astronauti­cs, developing cheaper, more efficient solar panels for satellites.

Early Rocket Lab collaborat­or Mark Rocket (who still owns shares in the company) has a startup developing 32m-wingspan UAVs that will fly at twice the height of a commercial jetliner.

Beck sees more of the same on the way, in part thanks to his company’s Nasdaq listing, which he’s hoping will prove the largest ever for any company operation out of NZ.

“We have over 400 employees that have that have stock and over 100 of those will potentiall­y be millionair­es. And that fuels the continued entreprene­urial economy.

“There are two things I’m super passionate about. One is obviously Rocket Lab and space. The other is growing more New Zealand entreprene­urs.

“Because I think of I think New Zealand’s ticket here to a really highwage, high-productivi­ty, high-value economy tech companies, relatively small footprints — many with relatively small footprints.”

Launches set to resume

First, Rocket Lab has to get back on the horse. After it lost an Electron rocket on May 15, the company quietly pushed back its Nasdaq listing time frame from “executed in the second quarter” to “expected in the third quarter,” giving it time to get another successful launch under its belt.

“The Flight 20 anomaly investigat­ion is wrapping up here very quickly. So we’ll get back to the pad here pretty shortly,” Beck says.

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 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Peter Beck says Rocket Lab is a hard, fast environmen­t and makes no apology for it.
Photo / Dean Purcell Peter Beck says Rocket Lab is a hard, fast environmen­t and makes no apology for it.

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