Planet: Disrupting Space by Democratizing Digital Imagery

Planet is using hundreds of tiny satellites to capture real-time imagery of earth's entire surface, and their data imaging software can help answer the questions that you and millions of others are asking.

San Francisco-based start-up Planet is successfully disrupting the space industry, How? By launching more than 300 shoe box-sized satellites into orbit since the company was founded in 2010. Since inception, Planet’s mission has been to image the entire world every day. That is 12 trillion square inches photographed every day. Most satellite images are updated weekly, monthly, or in the case of Google Earth as infrequently as every five years.  By combining cloud computing, cheap satellite imagery technology, and high-volume data storage, Planet provides its customers with real-time visibility into how our planet is changing.

Planet’s global imaging has a vast array of end uses, creating a strong value proposition across industries. For example, the real-time imagery can be used for predicting crop yields to monitoring security threats, and tracking disaster impacts and planning emergency response. Planet is creating value by positioning themselves as a vital data source for a wide array of companies. Currently, major clients include big agriculture and government agencies. However, one of Planet’s genius positioning maneuvers is recognizing how they can bring significant value to the financial industry, a massive market with deep pockets. Planet’s images can help the finance industry monitor their strategic global assets, conduct due diligence, ground-truth local conditions, identify business risks early, and ultimately make better financial and business decisions.

Satellite captures fire in agricultural field. Source: www.planet.com

Planet has kept captured value by keeping their costs low. Planet recognized that smartphones have ninety percent of the technology needed to capture satellite imagery. They simply use the technology that is available on the market. They update it by swapping out the old smart phone technology with the latest models. As such, Planet’s satellites, known as “doves,” are several orders of magnitude cheaper than the average $300-million (or more) school-bus sized LandSat imagery satellites launched by the USGS. They are easy to produce, lightweight, and easy to launch. In fact, Planet has been crafty in minimizing the cost of their launch strategy. They ask other space explorers (i.e. SpaceX) to put a few of their doves into already scheduled rocket launches and pop them out the window when the rocket reaches orbit.

Dove Satellite. Source: Ryan. 2017.

However, the shoe box satellites market is already becoming competitive. Planet currently has more satellites in orbit than all other launchers combined, and their massive fleet is one of their strongest competitive advantages. Unfortunately, satellites themselves do not necessarily make a good business. (As evidence, in 2017 Google sold their satellite photography business, Terra Bella, to Planet). Planet plans to further differentiate itself by building image processing and recognition software. To further strengthen its value proposition, it is essential that Planet can process the imagery data to answer critical questions that companies and governments are asking (not just provide heaps of raw images and data). Ultimately, Planet hopes to index the physical changes on the planets surface in the same way that google indexed the internet, and Google plans to pay them for these services. #Winning!

Sources:

Anzilott, Eillie. 2017. Every Day, This Satellite Company Takes A Snapshot Of The Entire Planet. FastCompany. https://www.fastcompany.com/40498033/every-day-this-satellite-company-takes-a-snapshot-of-the-entire-planet

Babcock, Charles. 2015. Planet Labs Revolutionizes Earth Views With Inexpensive Satellites Information Week. https://www.informationweek.com/cloud/platform-as-a-service/planet-labs-revolutionizes-earth-views-with-inexpensive-satellites/d/d-id/1322196?

Bradshaw, Tim. 2017. Google sells satellite-photo business Terra Bella to Planet. myFT. https://www.ft.com/content/3c6fddf7-0b26-3dde-aa2d-d5c0fa6d8c33

Ryan, Kevin. 2017. This Company Has the Largest Fleet of Orbiting Satellites in Human History. Inc. Available at: https://www.inc.com/kevin-j-ryan/planet-labs-2017-company-of-the-year-nominee.html

The Economist. 2017. Planet’s satellites offer customers a new world view every day. https://www.economist.com/news/business/21717110-analysing-images-space-could-be-big-business-planets-satellites-offer-customers-new-world

 

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Student comments on Planet: Disrupting Space by Democratizing Digital Imagery

  1. Awesome post! I think that the applications for real-time, high quality imaging combined with AI are infinite and that we are barely starting to understand the full potential of the technology. However, I wonder about the sustainability of launching thousands of small low-cost satellites into orbit. These satellites eventually will become “space junk” orbiting earth at extremely high speeds and possibly complicate the launch of space craft or next generation satellites for space exploration.

  2. Interesting! I had never heard of Planet before or thought that companies would be moving into this space, though now it seems to be the very logical next step to Google mapping out the world on the terrestrial plane. It raises questions about the ethics of the business. For example, what responsibility should Planet have to escalate or to report things they observe to the government or regulatory bodies, outside of their contracts? As they bring on new clients, especially across different industries, there may be conflicts of interest that they must address. I wonder whether the founders have thought about this; Google must have had similar conversations when beginning to map out the world, so perhaps Planet could learn from them.

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