+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

Elon Musk has job openings for more than 500 people at SpaceX - here's who the rocket company wants to hire

Jun 7, 2018, 21:45 IST

Elon Musk and a SpaceX illustration of its Big Falcon Spaceship on Mars.Shayanne Gal/Business Insider

Advertisement
  • A careers page for SpaceX shows that the rocket company founded by Elon Musk is in a big hiring phase.
  • SpaceX appears to be using new hires to establish a global satellite internet network, build rocketships that could go to Mars, and launch NASA astronauts into space.
  • Most jobs call for engineers, technicians, and supervisors or managers. But some positions are for cooks, security guards, writers, editors, and even baristas.


SpaceX's first launch - its own - was more than 16 years ago, when a handful of employees opened a nearly empty office.

"In 2002 SpaceX basically consisted of carpet and a mariachi band. That was it," founder Elon Musk has said.

But these days, thanks to cash infusions worth billions of dollars, SpaceX has ballooned its staff beyond 6,000 people, according to recent FCC filings. The rocket company is using this army to out-price and out-perform its competitors in a new space race. SpaceX and Musk's ultimate quest is to create a human settlement on Mars.

To get these and other jobs done, the rocket company is on a hiring spree that shows no signs of slowing.

Advertisement

In March 2017, SpaceX had more than 470 positions listed on its careers page, and presumably most of those positions have been filled by now. As of Tuesday, however, SpaceX has more than 540 open positions. An analysis by Thinknum suggests the company's hiring slowed around September 2017 but has risen steadily since then.

"The men and women who work with me are integral in supporting our mission to make humanity multiplanetary - and we need more folks to join us," Andy Lambert, SpaceX's vice president of production, said in a recent Reddit post.

The myriad job descriptions, along with recent statements from Musk, reveal what kind of help SpaceX is looking for.

Why SpaceX is hiring hundreds of people

An illustration of SpaceX's and Elon Musk's &quotBig F---ing Rocket" system launching toward space.SpaceX/YouTube

Musk's rocket company plans to launch 30 of its workhorse Falcon 9 rockets this year, which is a record-breaking pace for a country, let alone a single company.

Advertisement

SpaceX is about to fully transition to the last major iteration of its Falcon 9 rocket, called Block 5. Musk has described the partly reusable launcher as "the most reliable rocket ever built." The company also recently wrapped up a $500-million, years-long effort to create its behemoth Falcon Heavy rocket - which essentially puts the power of three Falcon 9 launchers into one system.

These advancements, Musk has said, have freed up much of his engineering workforce to focus on other projects.

As we previously reported, SpaceX is shifting a lot of resources toward its most ambitious project: the Big Falcon Rocket (also called the Big F--king Rocket).

The 348-foot-tall, fully reusable system is scheduled for an "aspirational" first launch toward Mars in 2022. Its enormous spaceship - which sits atop a similarly enormous booster - is currently being built out of carbon-fiber composites in the Port of Los Angeles. That prototype is slated to roll out of SpaceX's facilities in Texas and begin hopping around with short test launches sometime in 2019.

A test-firing of a Raptor rocket engine, which is being designed to power SpaceX ships to Mars.SpaceX/Flickr (public domain)

Advertisement

In a series of remarks made in September 2017, Musk said the system will replace everything SpaceX has built thus far, since its total reusability means it will cost relatively little to launch payloads of any size.

"We want to have one system, one booster and ship, that replaces Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy, and Dragon," Musk said of SpaceX's other rockets. "If we can do that, then all the resources that are used for Falcon 9, Heavy, and Dragon can be applied to this system."

But the BFR isn't just for Mars: Musk plans to use it to create the world's fastest transportation system, in conjunction with a Hyperloop - a subterranean transportation network he's also working on.

Though SpaceX is hinging its future on the BFR, it's just one major effort the company needs workers for.

SpaceX is also working on its Crew Dragon spaceship as well as cargo launches for NASA.

Advertisement

Then there's Starlink: a global constellation of nearly 12,000 internet-providing satellites. (That's double the number of satellites that have been launched in the history of access to space, according to a count by the Union of Concerned Scientists.) SpaceX launched two hand-made Starlink prototypes in February, and the FCC approved its larger plan in March. If the rocket company can pull that project off, the entire planet will be covered in ultra-high-speed, low-latency internet signal within a decade.

It's a lot to take on, so SpaceX needs talented help - and quite a bit of it - if those efforts are to succeed.

The jobs available at SpaceX and where they're located

SpaceX

As of Tuesday, SpaceX's careers page offered 542 jobs across 42 departments, and all of the postings begin with this otherworldly mission statement:

"SpaceX was founded under the belief that a future where humanity is out exploring the stars is fundamentally more exciting than one where we are not. Today SpaceX is actively developing the technologies to make this possible, with the ultimate goal of enabling human life on Mars."

Advertisement

Here's where SpaceX's jobs are located across the US:

Andy Kiersz/Business Insider

About two-thirds of positions are based at SpaceX's global headquarters in Hawthorne, California, which is part of the greater Los Angeles area.

The Redmond-based jobs are likely tied to Starlink, since that's where SpaceX has opened up a fabrication facility. If the job descriptions and the company's history are any clue, SpaceX plans to do as much in-house manufacturing as possible.

Take the description of the first open position on the list, for example - an antenna engineer:

Advertisement

In short, this person will likely help enable Starlink satellites to send data to and from Earth.

SpaceX is also hiring in McGregor, Texas, where its testing facility is located. That's the facility in which the company's next-generation Raptor rocket engines are being developed.

Here's a rough breakdown of the types of jobs the company is offering:

Andy Kiersz/Business Insider

Nearly all of these jobs are full-time, and about half are for engineers and technicians who have experience working with rocket engines, robots, software, explosive fuels, or other high-tech systems required to colonize Mars.

Advertisement

That leaves a bunch of "other" jobs, though, and few walks of life are excluded.

SpaceX needs four line cooks to provide "courteous and informative customer service in an 'open kitchen' format" - two in Cape Canaveral, Florida (a hub of launch activity), one in Hawthorne, California (company headquarters), and another in Vandenberg, California (where SpaceX sometimes launches rockets).

It's also hiring four technical writers and an editor, as well as electricians, security officers, and coffee shop baristas.

What working for Musk and SpaceX is like

Reuters

People who worked at SpaceX - or at least claim to have done so - have provided mixed reviews of their experiences in recent years.

Advertisement

Some praised Musk's leadership on Quora, saying they'd follow him "into the gates of hell carrying suntan oil."

But former SpaceX interns previously told Business Insider that "people who work there are more driven to work than they are driven to go home. They get burned out really quickly." Other former interns said that, while SpaceX employees are "some of the hardest-working and brightest people in the world," they are "universally defeated" by the intense work demands and expectations.

SpaceX maintains that it's a top place to make a career.

"SpaceX has been named one of the top 50 places to work by Glassdoor the past two years in a row," a SpaceX representative told Business Insider. Glassdoor is a site that gathers anonymous reviews of companies by current and former employees.

If you want to work at SpaceX, the résumé you hand in better list some serious qualifications.

Advertisement

NOW WATCH: There's a place at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean where hundreds of giant spacecraft go to die

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article