• 3 months ago
With SpaceX and NASA as partners, Axiom pioneered commercial space flight to the International Space Station. Its next act was to be a commercial space station of its own. But missteps, dire financials and delays have sent it spiraling out of trajectory.

Read the full story on Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeremybogaisky/2024/09/17/axiom-space-station/

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Transcript
00:00Today on Forbes, this billionaire startup wanted to build a space station.
00:05Now it can barely pay its bills.
00:09Axiom Space, a startup co-founded by billionaire Cam Ghaffarian, has a lofty goal—to build
00:15private space stations that allow humans to live and work off-planet, en masse.
00:22But lately, the Houston-based company has been grappling with a more earthly concern—a
00:27struggle for survival.
00:29According to internal documents, seven former employees who spoke on the condition of anonymity
00:33due to nondisclosure agreements, and space industry experts, a severe cash crunch, business
00:40challenges and a cold reception to its latest fundraising efforts have hamstrung Axiom and
00:45led to extensive layoffs and pay cuts.
00:49Axiom had intended to build an orbiting outpost using the International Space Station, or
00:53ISS, as a base.
00:56The plan was to build modularly, connecting sections of its so-called Axiom station to
01:01the ISS, finishing work on them in space, and finally detaching the completed station
01:06to fly free.
01:08It would make money by hosting tourists and companies looking to use microgravity conditions
01:13for things like drug development and semiconductor manufacturing.
01:17But Forbes has learned that plan has been upended by Axiom's slow progress on the first
01:22module and the prospect that the ISS may have to be de-orbited two years earlier than
01:27planned.
01:28Now, a year after raising $350 million in a round led by Saudi Arabia's Al Jazeera
01:34Capital and South Korean pharma company Boryeong at a valuation of $2 billion, giving it a
01:41total of $500 million in funding, the startup is struggling to convince investors to give
01:46it more money to fund a smaller, less commercially lucrative station.
01:51This according to former employees who spoke to Forbes.
01:55The lack of fresh capital has exacerbated long-standing financial challenges that have
02:00grown alongside Axiom's payroll, which earlier this year was nearly 1,000 employees.
02:06Sources familiar with the company's operations told Forbes that co-founder and CEO Michael
02:11Soffredini, who spent 30 years at NASA, ran Axiom like a big government program instead
02:16of the resource-constrained startup it really was.
02:20His mandate to staff up to 800 workers by the end of 2022 led to mass hiring so detached
02:26from product development needs that new engineers often found themselves with nothing to do,
02:32according to our sources.
02:34In an interview discussing a range of issues raised by Forbes reporting, Ghaffarian conceded
02:39that Axiom was facing challenges, including a tough fundraising environment that required
02:44a quote, right-sizing of staff.
02:47But he said he expects to close on fresh funding by the end of the year and that the
02:51future is bright.
02:53He said, quote,
02:54All my space companies where we are doing things that have never been done before, it
02:58is not a straight line.
03:01When Axiom was founded in 2016, it promised investors the first station module would be
03:06aloft in 2020.
03:09With that target receding, Axiom looked to expand into two new lines of business to bring
03:14in badly needed revenue while the station was under development.
03:18In 2020, it began lining up passenger trips to the ISS on SpaceX rockets.
03:24The company pitched these private missions as a way to develop the capability to bring
03:27business one day to its own orbital outpost.
03:31And in 2022, it won $228 million in NASA funding to design spacesuits for the Artemis III moon
03:38mission.
03:40But the suits program sucked engineers and resources away from the station effort, and
03:44the passenger service to the ISS proved to be a money-hemorrhaging distraction, former
03:49employees said.
03:50A former Axiom executive told Forbes, quote,
03:55Turns out there's not a lot of billionaires that want to set aside their life for 18 months
03:59to go train to be an astronaut for the ISS.
04:03Axiom found itself struggling to make payroll, which hit $10 million a month in early 2023,
04:09per an internal document, and it fell behind on payments to suppliers, former employees said.
04:16The former Axiom executive told Forbes, quote,
04:19The fundraise rounds were never enough to keep us ahead of the curve, and the revenue
04:23certainly wasn't closing the gap.
04:27For full coverage, check out Jeremy Bogaski's piece on Forbes.com.
04:33This is Kieran Meadows from Forbes.
04:35Thanks for tuning in.
04:39♪♪♪

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