Neel Kunjur, Co-founder and CTO of K2 Space, reveals how his company is breaking the historic correlation between satellite mass and cost. In this episode, he shares K2’s engineering philosophy of using mass as an opportunity rather than a constraint, the importance of iteration in constellation deployment, and why SES’s pioneering approach to MEO operations makes them the perfect partner. Plus, hear the remarkable story of how his space career hinged on an SES launch.
Key Topics Covered
- Breaking the mass-cost paradigm: How K2 enables large, capable satellites at small satellite prices
- Engineering mindset shift: Viewing mass as an opportunity to simplify rather than a constraint to minimize
- Iteration philosophy: Moving from decadal to annual deployment cadence for continuous improvement
- SES innovation history: First major operator to adopt Falcon 9, first to commit to MEO operations
- Leadership lessons: The importance of finding ground truth and staying connected to product details
Memorable Quotes:
“We think customers shouldn’t have to choose. We think large sats that are low cost is the new regime we should be playing in.”
“The way you’re able to do this is by a complete mindset shift. Start viewing mass as an opportunity. Use mass to make heavier systems that are simpler, easier to produce, faster to produce.”
“My entire space career was hinging on that launch. SES-8 on Falcon 9 was their first launch, and I’m so grateful to SES because that’s why I’m here today.”
About the Guest:
Neel Kunjur is Co-founder and CTO of K2 Space, a company revolutionising satellite manufacturing by breaking the traditional mass-cost curve. Previously at SpaceX, his career literally hinged on the success of SES-8, the first SES launch on Falcon 9. Neel is passionate about challenging assumptions in spacecraft design and enabling the next generation of satellite constellations. He finds his happy place in his childhood home in Chicago, especially during the summer months, and is a big Blink-182 fan.