If you want to send something to space — start with Gravity
Gravity is a digital platform for space launches and services.
We systematise the market, connect launch operators, integrators and clients in one place and make access to space transparent and understandable.
Huge market. No structured digital entry point.
01 · Fragmented, opaque data
Launch operators, brokers, manufacturers, integrators and data vendors all live in separate silos.
There is no single digital layer that systematises who launches, who builds, who provides data — with comparable parameters.
02 · Mission planning takes months
Choosing a rocket, orbit and launch window means weeks of calls and PDFs.
As the number of rockets grows, it gets harder for customers to understand who is actually available, under which constraints and at what risk/price mix.
03 · Hard to find satellites, data and contractors
“We need satellite data / our own satellite” → LinkedIn, chats, conferences and guesswork.
Teams don’t see which manufacturer, integrator or data provider really fits their task, budget and timeline.
Built from real interviews. Focused on where demand is sharpest.
What we learned from the market
We conducted in-depth conversations with participants from 8 countries — brokers, operators, satellite companies and end customers.
Gravity is designed as a global service where any company can start — from a local startup to a state-owned corporation.
Two core focus areas
1. Countries without their own launchers
2. China as the rising provider
Our strategy: make Gravity the bridge between Chinese providers and emerging markets — while building a neutral platform that digitises the whole global market.
Where Gravity sits in the ecosystem
Launch brokers & integrators
Companies like Exolaunch, ISILAUNCH, Spaceflight Inc. and others sell launch and mission services for specific providers. They sit inside the deal as contractors and optimise for their portfolio, not for a full-market view.
Digital launch tools
Platforms such as Precious Payload or launch portals from individual operators help plan or book launches — but focus on the launch step only and do not unify rockets, contractors and data providers into one comparable system.
Data & analytics platforms
Market intelligence players (e.g. BryceTech, Seradata) and contractor directories (e.g. Satsearch) provide data and discovery, but they are not a transactional entry point where a team can go from idea to contracted mission in one flow.
Competitive landscape at a glance
| Type | Examples | Main focus | Launches | Contractors | Data | Mission tools | Neutral layer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Launch brokers / integrators | Exolaunch, ISILAUNCH, Spaceflight Inc. | Sell missions for own providers | ✓ | ✓ | – | ✓ (deal-specific) | – |
| Digital launch tools | Precious Payload, operator portals | Launch planning & booking | ✓ | – | – | ✓ | – |
| Data / market analytics | BryceTech, Seradata, Satsearch | Market data & discovery | – | ✓ (directory) | ✓ | – | – |
| Gravity | Launches, satellites & data in one layer | Digital entry point to the ecosystem | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Gravity does not replace brokers, integrators or data providers — it systematises them and becomes the structured, neutral entry point where customers see the whole field and then connect to the right partners.
Media-led funnel, targeted outreach, pilot missions.
01 · Gravity Media
Deep coverage of Chinese commercial space, emerging-space programmes and behind-the-scenes of missions. Practical formats (“How to plan your first mission”, “How to choose a launcher / integrator / data provider”) lead directly into Gravity tools.
02 · Targeted outreach
For each priority region we build a concrete account list: agencies, national programmes, key corporates and local integrators. Then we run direct conversations, conference presence and partnerships instead of generic marketing.
03 · Pilot missions & projects
The goal for the first cycle is a small but meaningful set of pilots: several launch missions and data / satellite projects guided end-to-end through Gravity. Each pilot becomes a case and proof point for the platform.
Typical yearly funnel per target region: ~150–200 identified accounts → 40–50 conversations → 10–15 qualified opportunities → 3–5 pilots → 1–2 paid deals. We use this structure to plan realistic growth, not “unicorn” curves.
Gravity — the digital layer above launches, satellites and data
Gravity is not a traditional broker. It is an infrastructure platform that sits over the industry and unifies it.
Our role: be the missing link in the global space chain — the neutral digital entry point into the market.
How Gravity is used in practice.
01 · Emerging-space country mission
A government agency or company in a country without its own launcher wants to put a payload into orbit. Today this is months of Google, conferences and warm intros. With Gravity they enter mission parameters, instantly see compatible rockets, compare options, download a structured briefing and send a single RFQ that we validate and route to operators.
02 · “We need a satellite / data”
A commercial company or agency needs satellite data or a small satellite but is not a space expert. Instead of LinkedIn and guesswork, they use Gravity to find manufacturers, integrators and data providers by task, orbit, region and budget — and reach them through one contact layer.
03 · Gravity Media as a funnel
Decision-makers discover us through Gravity Media: analysis of Chinese commercial space, emerging programmes and company breakdowns. Each piece links to specific tools — “Plan your mission with Gravity”, “Find contractors” — turning attention into qualified requests.
We start with launches — and grow into a full ecosystem.
Block 1 · Launch a mission
Select a rocket, calculate mission parameters and send a request to operators — in minutes, not months.
Block 2 · Find a contractor
From building a satellite to accessing data — everything in a single system.
We connect companies that want to bring a project to orbit with teams that actually know how to get it there.
Curated MVP now. Automated engine next.
Live curated MVP
Gravity already runs as a live interface with a unified database of ~75 rockets, a basic mission calculator and a single RFQ form. All technical and commercial parameters are collected directly from operators and open sources and then normalised manually by our team and aerospace experts.
The backend today is intentionally “curated”: we validate requests, refine requirements and route them to operators by hand. This is how we learn the logic and edge-cases before encoding them into software.
Gravity Data & Mission Engine
Phase 0 — today: manual curation and validation, simple compatibility checks, growing internal rules.
Phase 1 — semi-automation: standardised schemas for rockets, missions, satellites and contractors; operator and vendor portals to update slots, parameters and constraints; rules engine for export-control filters and risk/price recommendations.
Phase 2 — integrated engine: API integrations where possible, live capacity and pricing, deeper mission planning (multi-launch scenarios, hosted payloads, tugs) and built-in insurance estimates. We don’t automate noise — we systematise the market manually first and only then turn it into code.
Orienspace × Gravity — first official launch partner
What this partnership shows
This is a prototype for a repeatable model: operators plug into Gravity as their digital front-door for international customers.
Digital infrastructure first. Monetisation as we become default.
Gravity business model
Platform development stages
Goal: validate concept, collect first data and build initial trust.
Goal: first consultations, first potential deals, reputation as a clear, accessible tool.
Goal: become the standard digital tool for finding space services and the entry point for global users.
Investment allocation
| Expense | Stage 1 MVP · $50k | Stage 2 Core · $150k | Stage 3 Mobile · $200k |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salaries & core team | $18k | $60k | $80k |
| Product & development | $15k | $45k | $60k |
| Infrastructure & licenses | $2k | $7.5k | $10k |
| Marketing, media & PR | $8k | $22.5k | $30k |
| Reserve / outsourcing / legal | $7k | $15k | $20k |
| Total per stage | $50k | $150k | $200k |
| Cumulative investment | $50k | $200k | $400k |
Revenue & ROI (annual run-rate)
Example: a realistic mix of several launch deals per year, a portfolio of contractor/data projects and a focused base of PRO subscribers already leads to a ~$0.6M run-rate at Stage 2. As the platform becomes the default entry point, this scales with the market, not with headcount.
Who is building Gravity
Over 10 years deeply involved in space as a domain — now combining personal passion with product and go-to-market experience.
Expert in designing and integrating CRM, ERP systems and platforms — responsible for Gravity’s architecture and operations.
Designed 30+ training programmes and worked with leading brands. Builds Gravity’s product methodology and decision logic.
Extended expert pool
We are raising $50K to kick off the first phase of our digital gateway to space.
Total planned investment across three stages is $400,000.
This covers product development, UX/UI, data and content, market entry in target regions and legal support.
Key use of funds:
- • Product & engineering — launch and mission tools, contractor marketplace, mobile app.
- • Go-to-market — focus on countries without launchers and on Chinese providers going global.
- • Media & brand — Gravity Media and documentary-style formats that explain the market and our partners.
This $50k is an angel / pre-seed bridge to fully test the model and close the MVP loop before a larger structured round.
If you want to invest in space infrastructure — start with Gravity
Gravity digitises launches, satellites, data and services and makes them accessible through one entry point.
We are ready to go deeper into the product, financial model and roadmap with your team.
Let’s schedule a conversation and walk you through Gravity, the current MVP and the plan ahead.
Email: team@grvty.space
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