Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd: a Surrey Success Story

Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL) is a global company based out of Surrey Research Park in Guildford. It was founded nearly 50 years ago and now has 400 employees. Discover more about the opportunities of working in space that Surrey has to offer by watching our video.

About Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd

Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL) is a Surrey Success Story which is literally out of this world.

From starting out in the late 1970s as an experiment in a small university lab, the company has really taken off.

And now, more than 40 years on, SSTL has 400 employees and launched more than 70 satellites into space for 22 countries.

But, more importantly, it paved a new way in space exploration – demonstrating how relatively small and inexpensive “micro” satellites could be built rapidly to perform successful and sophisticated missions.

Its story is a showcase of British ingenuity, ambition and engineering expertise. And central to it all has been its home region of Surrey.

History of Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd

In the late 1970s, a group of researchers working at the University of Surrey, led by a young Martin Sweeting, decided to experiment by creating a satellite using commercial off-the-shelf components.

That first satellite, UoSat-1, was built in a small university lab in a cleanroom fabricated from B&Q.

Launched in 1981 with the help of NASA, the small satellite was a great success, outliving its planned three year life by more than five years.

In 1985 Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd formed as a spin-out company to transfer the results of research into a commercial enterprise.

In 2009 Airbus bought the majority shareholding from the University of Surrey, allowing SSTL to fulfill its growth potential.

It continues to go from strength to strength. Future plans include working on the Lunar Pathfinder project. This will be the UK’s first full satellite to go and orbit the moon.

SSTL and Surrey Research Park

“Surrey is the sole reason we exist today. I think from my friends at school who went to other universities at the same time that I did, and who tried to do one or two sort of things a little bit out of the ordinary. They tended to get sort of pushed back.”

Rather than being pushed back, Sir Martin Sweeting received backing aplenty, crucially from the University of Surrey.

The institution supported his idea and a home at the Surrey Research Park, where SSTL remains today.

Since being formed more than 40 years ago, SSTL has created more than 2,500 jobs. In the same period, its turnover has been £1.5 billion, of which £1 billion has been exports.

Key to growth has been collaboration with other Surrey businesses, including the Space South Central cluster.

Zoe Bowden, Head of Procurement and ESG, says: “We’re the largest space cluster in the UK at the moment. It’s a really fantastic way to unite industry, academia and government. Our indirect supply chain has really benefited from a lot of the SMEs that are around the local area.”

Surrey’s location is also a brilliant selling point to investors and important stakeholders.

Andrew Greenhalgh, Head of Marketing, explains: “The number of visitors we get here, the number of politicians who are interested in space, who love the fact they can be in Surrey within 35 minutes from Waterloo. We’re very proud that we can bring them down to Surrey and show them what we’re doing here.”

Discover more about jobs and careers with SSTL on the SSTL jobs page.

Need extra support?

STEP Surrey provides dedicated support to help you and other Surrey residents find work or return to work.

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Free digital skills training for Surrey adults

Free digital skills training is available to all Surrey adults. Boost your confidence with computers to improve your skills and increase your potential earnings with courses from Surrey Adult Learning.

Surrey Adult Learning offers free courses across Surrey for those aged 19 or over. Delivered by expert tutors, they are perfect for people looking to get work-ready or simply boost their skills.

It will also help you work from home and use computers in your personal time with greater confidence.

The courses will help you:

  • Learn essential skills required for work and home such as Cloud storage, email management and communication
  • Discover how to create and edit professional looking documents.
  • Understand how to troubleshoot your device and search the internet effectively.
  • Explore social media settings and protocol.
  • Know how to be safe and responsible online and how to control your digital footprint.

Enrolments open every term in March, July and November. If courses have already started you may still be able to join so please contact the Surrey Adult Learning team.

Next extra help to take the next step? Contact the STEP Surrey team via the Get Support Now form.

Sign up for free digital skills training in Surrey

Surrey Adult Learning offers free digital skills courses for a range of abilities.

To apply complete the application form. The Surrey Adult Learning team will evaluate your eligibility and skills then provide a course offer. You must accept this offer to secure your place.

If you need help completing this form please

Eligibility criteria

Digital skills courses at Surrey Adult Learning are free for adults aged 19 or over on the 31 August 2024.

They must be:

  • Adults aged 19 or over on 31 August 2024
  • Able to easily travel to an agreed Surrey Adult Learning centre to sit exams or assessments (where applicable)
  • United Kingdom (UK) nationals – Who currently live in England and have been resident in the UK for at least three full years prior to starting their course

Those on asylum or refugee schemes will be exempt from the three-year rule.

The full list of eligibility criteria is on the Surrey Adult Learning website.

If you’re unsure then get in touch with the STEP Surrey team via the Get Support Now form.

A tutor helps a learner with digital skills training. Both are sat down at a desk with computer in front of them.

Ann Summers: a Surrey Success Story

Ann Summers has been a landmark business in Surrey for more than 50 years. And during that time they have used the region as a base to garner international notoriety. Discover more about this landmark Surrey business and the opportunities they have by watching our video.

About Ann Summers

Ann Summers has a global reputation with an annual turnover of more than £100 million – and it’s all forged from a HQ in Surrey.

As chief executive officer Maria Hollins says: “We are known for being trailblazers, for breaking taboos and pushing boundaries. I think we literally are one-of-a-kind.”

The business started out in 1971 as two stores. The Gold family bought it in 1972. Under their leadership it has grown to be an established, iconic British brand.

The company now has 86 stores, a global website, trade with 14 external partners and direct selling business. Its most recent annual turnover was reported to be more than £100 million.

But its head office and warehouse is very local – next to the A22 in Whyteleafe, just north of Caterham.

Working at Ann Summers

“When you speak to people in our business and you ask them why they joined and why they stay with Ann Summers, it is because of our culture.”

As Talent Acquisition and Engagement Lead at Ann Summers, Lauren Simmons knows the reasons why people love working at the business.

With 360 colleagues working at their Whyteleafe HQ there is lots of scope for progression. And many of those who work for the business have been with the company for many years. This is in part down to the culture, its reputation for innovation and the where it is based.

But why did Ann Summers base itself in Surrey back in the early 1970s?

Melinda Louis, Operations Manager at Ann Summers, says:

“We have been here for more than 50 years. The family were based in Surrey so it kind of made sense for the business to be here.”

Surrey – a great place to do business

So, what are the advantages of a major retail business being anchored in Surrey?

Well, for those at Ann Summers it’s all about location, location, location.

With two international airports, the M25 just minutes away and excellent connections to London and Dover, there’s nowhere better.

Melinda Louis, Operations Manager at Ann Summers, says: “We always talk about the Midlands for logistics. Well, let me tell you, Surrey is the place to be. It’s kind of that feeling of having everything London has, but with additional benefits.”

“We’ve got great transport links. We’re very close to the M25, pretty close to some of the ports and obviously we bring in a lot of product inbound from overseas.”

Tens of thousands of people see the building every day thanks to its position next to the A22.

Lauren Simmons, Talent Acquisition and Engagement Lead at Ann Summers, says“We’ve almost become a bit of a landmark actually. The roundabout that is right by our office is now known as the Ann Summers roundabout, which we’re really proud of.”

View the latest available jobs at the Ann Summers careers pages.

Need extra support?

STEP Surrey provides dedicated support to help you and other Surrey residents find work or return to work.

Search our provider directory to find a place to start learning new skills.

If you need further support, you can get in touch with our team of experts via the Get Support Now form.

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Rita Botanicals: from pop-up to permanent thanks to Multiply

Rita Botanicals is a business in Guildford which sells plants, pots and house gardening services. Here’s how a free Multiply course helped make that happen.

When Rita gave up her job in a creative agency for health reasons, she knew she wanted to do something different next. She wanted to help people in some way. And make use of the love and knowledge of plants she learned from her grandmother, also named Rita.

Rita landed on the idea to open a plant shop with a difference – one with a strong community ethos and emphasis on mental health.

“I just envisioned a place where it would be more of a community-based business. I wanted to not just have a plant shop, my goal was to create a space for people to feel more themselves.”

However, she wasn’t sure how to get started. She felt lacking in investment funds and business knowledge, and crucially, was also lacking in confidence about her numeracy skills.

And that’s where Rita discovered Multiply.

Funded by government, Multiply courses were created to help adults without Maths GCSE to improve their maths skills and number confidence.

Rita was able to take a Multiply course on ‘How to start your own business without money’ run by The Rebel Business School (a Multiply provider for Surrey County Council).

It didn’t cost her anything. And it boosted her number confidence from 1 out of 5 before the course, to a score of 4 out of 5 on completion.

Importantly the course helped her to understand tax, VAT, and the basics of setting up and running a small business. It meant she felt confident to make the leap and start her own. She says,

“In terms of numeracy, [the course] really boosted my knowledge. And then I got the confidence when I got through it.”

Starting a business: Rita Botanicals

Following the Multiply course, although Rita still didn’t have any funds to invest in starting a business. So she took the resilience and adaptability skills she’d learned on the course. And applied to a business competition to win a pop-up-shop premises in Guildford.

“I didn’t have a lot of things to help me to go where I wanted, but [the course] pushed me to find alternative routes. They taught me skills of dig deep, keep looking, just keep going, it will happen, you’ve just got to keep searching, it might take longer but you’ll get there. And how to barter, how to get things.”

Rita won the pop-up premises. And her plant shop, Rita Botanicals now has a permanent home in Guildford’s White Lion Walk. All thanks to that initial Multiply course she took.

And has Rita fulfilled her dream of running a business that is also a place for the community? She says:

“It’s like this bridge between generations and a common interest, which is really nice to see. And also a lot of people get educated on nature again, because they don’t have the means to get out and about.  Whatever they’re going through it encourages them to bring it home.

“And I think that really helps a lot of people with their anxieties as well. I have a lot of people with depression that come through and I see how much they feel more at ease in the shop and I love that. So it’s not just a business it’s more of a place as well.”

Skills support in Surrey

STEP Surrey is a Surrey County Council service offering free skills, employment and training support.

Get in touch with our team of experts via our online Get Support Now form.

Headshot of a woman with dark hair holding a silver teapot in her hand. She's surrounded by flowers and botanicals.

Surrey Colleges construction skills competition 2025 showcases student talent

The Surrey Colleges Construction Skills competition saw dozens of future trades professionals face off in the annual showcase of future talent. It took place at at Brooklands Technical College in Weybridge.

Students from three Surrey Further Education colleges – East Surrey, Brooklands, and NESCOT – showcased their skills in brickwork, carpentry, and insulation installation.

The event provided an opportunity for students to demonstrate their technical abilities while adhering to the latest building regulations and installation standards.

With tasks tailored for different levels of expertise, the competition proved to be an excellent learning experience and a platform for future talent in the construction industry.

In line with SurreyFE’s core values, the competition also emphasised collaboration across the colleges, with students, staff, and mentors coming together to share knowledge, exchange skills, and work towards a common goal of excellence in construction.

Tasks for Surrey Colleges construction skills competition

The competition was divided into three key areas: brickwork, carpentry, and insulation installation. There were separate tasks designed for Level 1 and Level 2 students.

In brickwork the task involved constructing two distinct wall structures. Students had to construct a wall and install insulation to meet specific guidelines.

Level 1 first place went to Josh Tucker, followed by Isaac Martin and Rocco Sartori. First place for level 2 went to Alfie Jones with Emmanuel Meehan in second and Billy Sleath in third.

In the carpentry category, students had to build a planned structure, including a roof installation, and then applying insulation.

The winners were East Surrey College with Brooklands Technical College and NESCOT in joint second.

The insulation segment saw students had to follow detailed installation guidance to meet the latest building regulations. Each student was given a guidance sheet outlining the proper techniques and standards for installing insulation.

The winners of the insulation tasks were Alfie Jones (Gold), Emmanuel Meehan (Silver) and NESCOT Carpentry Team (Bronze).

The event concluded with a ceremony to celebrate the winners and recognise their efforts.

While the competition was fierce, the focus was on fostering learning and professional development among aspiring builders.

A special thank you to Kingspan for their vital support and sponsorship of the Surrey Colleges Construction Skills competition.

Congratulations to all the winners and participants. And thanks to the staff from East Surrey College, Brooklands Technical College, and NESCOT for their commitment to preparing future tradespeople.

The SurreyFE construction skills competition continues to be an outstanding platform for students to showcase their passion and skills in a collaborative and challenging environment.

Looking for further support?

There are hundreds of free or subsidised courses available to people who live in Surrey. So it’s never been easier to learn new skills.

Find a list of local providers via our easy-to-search provider directory.

Or you can look at current opportunities via our training and courses page.

Need further support? Get in touch with our team of experts via our Get Support Now form.

This story first appeared on the Surrey FE website in April 2025.

A construction worker stands looking at a newly-built wall. He holds a trowel in one hand and a spirit level in the other.
A group of three construction workers complete work on insulating a stud wall. One is stood on a yellow ladder.