Marcin Poznań: The US Marine Corps, US Army Corps of Engineers, Poland’s GROM and many more use your services. How did you manage to gain these impressive contracts?
Marcin Frąckiewicz:
How many customers does your company have? Are these just military?
It is a list of about 50-60 institutional customers, not only military, but also private companies that use our VSAT internet access. With our partner we provide services for nine US embassies in Africa. The number of individual soldiers using our services in Iraq and Afghanistan is around 15,000. Non-military customers include Agora, for example, which equips its foreign correspondents with satellite phones. The World Bank also uses our phone services. This customer list comprises several hundred.
How do you make your services competitive?
Price is the key. We cooperate with cheap middlemen and also directly with satellite operators. We buy services in Dubai, where our partners’ warehouses as well as the distributors of the equipment are located. It is also a tax-free zone, so that eliminates those costs. We have a partner installation teams on site in the Middle East, so we are able to set up the VSAT access very quickly.
Our company tries to minimize operational costs, hence our small office and large network of partners. This is a business where you win by [being knowledgeable]
Will you suffer from the recently announced spending cuts at the Defense Ministry?
I doubt it. Eighty-five percent of our orders go abroad. Of course there will be fewer government tenders and the competition will grow. So we have to expect fewer orders for our satellite phones in Poland. Plus some contracts for internet access may not be renewed.
What will you do when the American troops withdraw from Iraq then?
From the business point of view obviously we are not looking forward to the US pulling out [of Iraq], as most of our activity is based on the US Army presence in the Middle East. We would need to come up with a solution to reorganize our business. But there would still be corporate customers left for us.
How do you see the future of this sector?
We are anxiously awaiting the launch of the KA-SAT, which is scheduled for 2010. The aim of this project is to make satellite access services cheap enough for the “regular Kowalski” to make use of them. The prices of bandwidths are expected to drop tenfold, while the equipment is also expected to cost a few hundred złoty rather than several thousand. Our company would also like to get involved in this new offer, because it will help us target individual customers.
TS2 Satellite Technologies http://www.ts2.pl/




