Remember that scene in the TV show Billions where the protagonist, Bobby Alexrod explains how all the big (hedge) funds are using satellite images and how you can deduce how good Walmart*#8217;s quarter is going to be based on the number of cars in the parking lot (link to that awesome scene). Yup, that is how mainstream Geospatial analysis is today! That being said, there are not many startups in the world that is able to analyze petabytes of satellite imagery each day on a global scale to give what the hedge funds (and others) need. Orbital Insight is one of them.
I had the chance to interview Dave Story,*Chief Development Officer at Orbital Insight to learn more about their vision, the engineering challenges of building a scalable geospatial analytics platform and the one time when they broke AWS! Read on!Orbital Insight develops geospatial analytics to help its clients unlock societal and economic trends at a global scale. The company works with petabytes of geospatial data, including imagery from satellites, drones and other sources. Using computer vision and machine learning technologies, it processes and transforms this data to enable businesses, governments and NGOs to make better decisions.

I had the chance to interview Dave Story,*Chief Development Officer at Orbital Insight to learn more about their vision, the engineering challenges of building a scalable geospatial analytics platform and the one time when they broke AWS! Read on!Orbital Insight develops geospatial analytics to help its clients unlock societal and economic trends at a global scale. The company works with petabytes of geospatial data, including imagery from satellites, drones and other sources. Using computer vision and machine learning technologies, it processes and transforms this data to enable businesses, governments and NGOs to make better decisions.
Q: Dave, thanks for taking the time. Orbital Insight was started much before Cloud computing and Big data really became mainstream. Could you tell us more about what made James start the company and take the leap of faith to build an AI company focussed on geospatial analytics? A: Absolutely. Prior to founding Orbital Insight, Jimi had worked at NASA, Google Books, and the Climate Corporation (which was later acquired by Monsanto). He also has a PhD in artificial intelligence. This unique combination of experiences meant that, a little over five years ago, he saw a convergence of technology trends that led him to place three bets. First, he believed that deep learning was poised to deliver on its promises—the idea of deep learning has been around for quite a while, but back in 2013, it wasn’t yet reliably feasible as a cornerstone of a business model. Second, Jimi thought that GPUs would become much more widely available, particularly in the cloud computing farms being developed. Lastly, he saw Moore’s Law going to space, meaning that the cost of the technology needed to launch satellites was exponentially decreasing, which he believed would lead to an explosion of newly-available geospatial data.Say hello to the Orbital Insight Team!The reason why Orbital Insight has succeeded is that Jimi got all three of those bets right, even though at the time, none of them were a sure thing. When I decided to join the company earlier this year, one of the things that attracted me was the fact that Orbital Insight is well-positioned on the front end of these three innovations. I’ve spent a lot of time in California in my life, and one thing I’ve learned about surfing is that you won’t ever catch a wave if you start off too far behind. Because of Jimi’s vision, Orbital Insight is riding on the front of waves and leading the pack.Q: Measuring the current oil storage in tanks across the world or counting cars in a parking lot sound straightforward but anyone who has worked with remote sensing would know that it is anything but easy. What are the engineering challenges in developing remote sensing algorithms that not only have to be highly accurate but also scalable so that you can analyze terabytes of data every hour?A:*It’s a huge engineering challenge. We need to do a lot of different things with our models and data maintenance. When I joined the company, for instance, 35% of employees had PhDs, and 55% of the developers specifically had an advanced degree of some kind. It takes a lot of sharp talent to do this type of work effectively.We have good models that we use to analyze imagery and other geospatial data sources, but an important part of fine-tuning our products and building customer confidence is ground-truthing our findings. This means that we’ve flown drones over parking lots, for example, to compare where people park to which store they visit. That helps us calibrate our car counting product so that we can work with parking lots of all shapes and sizes and correctly correlate a parked car with traffic to a particular store. Working with geospatial data also presents unique challenges. With satellite imagery, we have to take into account things like the angle of the camera at the time a photo was taken relative to the ground. We need to be able to use all available images of a single location, even if the angles of the satellites that took the photos differed slightly. We’ve also had to build algorithms that can automatically detect and subtract out the presence of clouds in images in order to focus only on the usable data.Q: Let’s take counting cars to predict Walmart sales for example. The current assumption is that if they are in Walmart parking lot then they are shopping at Walmart. (A) You don’t always have a dedicated parking lot only for Walmart customers (B) People might buy more stuff on Sunday afternoon than they might on Tuesday evening. How do you account for these things in a product that as a global outlook like Orbital Insight?A:*That’s a great question. We spend a lot of effort on ground-truthing, as described previously, and also on data normalization. Part of this process entails running our algorithms over older satellite images and comparing our results against reported company performance. Having that historical analysis to compare present findings against also helps both us and our customers contextualize changes in the signals we monitor.As you mentioned, these sorts of challenges are also fueled by the global nature of our work. For example, as we work with the World Resources Institute to detect deforestation, we’ve had to account for the fact that the species of tree that’s of interest might be different from one country to the next—our algorithms must be able to classify forests in both Brazil and Malaysia, and anywhere in between.Q: Orbital Insight is what one might refer to as an “Analysis as a service company”. What are the challenges in convincing hedge funds who may not have any experience with satellite imagery or geospatial analytics to use your services?A:*Many of our customers have long histories of embracing innovative new technologies, so they’re open to the idea that a computer can analyze photos from space and help them make better investment decisions. As with any product, though, the proof of the pudding is in the eating. What we do is show prospective clients the concrete value that geospatial analysis can bring to their strategies. For instance, one of the public companies we cover is Chipotle. After the food poisoning incidents that the brand dealt with a few years ago, we did see car traffic in parking lots decline. But, when it started to go up again, we let our customers know right away—and this was weeks before official earnings. As a result, our customers had a two-month trading advantage over the competition.We don’t advocate using only geospatial analytics to make financial and other decisions, but we can persuasively demonstrate that it should be a part of any strategic toolbox because of its timely and objective nature. Q: Hedge fund managers and people working in the financial markets are possibly your core customers. Could you tell us more about your business model? Who is your target customer?A:*Really, our target customer is any decision maker who could benefit from the unique information that geospatial analytics provide. As you mentioned, many of our customers work in finance and use our products to help make investment decisions, but we also work with nonprofits, insurance companies, government agencies, and various businesses. The applications for this type of technology are really broad.At a basic level, our business model is subscription-based, where customers subscribe to certain products like Orbital Insight Consumer or Orbital Insight Energy. We also do some custom projects on a case-by-case basis. One unique component of our business model is the revenue sharing agreements we have in place with our data providers, which enables us to run analysis over huge amounts of data in a sustainable fashion.Q: On a lighter note, I heard a rumor that Orbital Insight product team (famously) broke the servers of a cloud computing company. Care to comment?