If you’ve ever thought ‘I’d love to work in space, but I’m not an engineer’ — this post is for you.
About 44% of jobs in the U.S. space industry are held by people in non-STEM roles. That’s not a typo. Almost half the workforce in space is made up of accountants, lawyers, marketers, HR professionals, writers, and supply chain managers.
Here are some of the most in-demand non-engineering roles in the space industry right now.
Finance and Accounting
Satellites cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Rockets cost more. Someone has to manage all that money — forecasting budgets, tracking costs, and making sure every dollar spent gets the company closer to its goals.
Space companies hire financial analysts, controllers, and CFOs just like any other industry. The work is the same; the context is a lot more interesting. If you have a finance or accounting background, you’re more hireable in space than you probably think.
Human Resources and Talent Acquisition
The space industry is on a massive hiring spree. SpaceX, Blue Origin, Rocket Lab, and hundreds of smaller companies are all trying to grow their workforces as fast as possible. That means recruiters, HR business partners, and people operations professionals are in serious demand.
If you work in HR and you’re passionate about space, this is one of the easiest bridges to cross. The skills transfer completely — you just need to learn the industry well enough to recruit for it.
Legal and Compliance
Space law is a real thing, and it’s getting complicated fast. As private companies race to launch satellites, mine asteroids, and eventually settle on other planets, the legal frameworks are struggling to keep up.
Space companies hire lawyers for regulatory compliance, contract negotiation, intellectual property, and export control (a big deal in aerospace, thanks to ITAR regulations). If you’re a lawyer who finds space interesting, this is a genuinely underserved niche.
Supply Chain and Logistics
A rocket has hundreds of thousands of individual components, sourced from suppliers all over the world. Getting those parts made, tested, and delivered on time is a massive logistical challenge — and the people who manage that process are critical to every launch.
Supply chain managers, procurement specialists, and logistics coordinators are in constant demand at aerospace companies. Experience in manufacturing supply chains is a big plus, but the skills transfer from other industries too.
Marketing and Communications
The space industry used to be pretty bad at marketing. That’s changing fast. Companies like SpaceX have figured out how to build enormous public audiences, and other players are catching up. That means content creators, social media managers, PR professionals, and brand marketers are increasingly valuable.
If you work in marketing and you’re willing to learn the industry, this is one of the most open doors in space right now. Companies are looking for people who can tell compelling stories — and space has the best stories in the world.
Education and Outreach
NASA and many private space companies invest heavily in education programs, community outreach, and STEM initiatives. People with backgrounds in teaching, curriculum development, and nonprofit work are regularly hired for these roles.
If you love space and you love helping people learn, this might be your path. It won’t pay like engineering, but it’s meaningful work that puts you inside the industry.
The Point
The space industry needs people from every background. The stereotype of the room full of engineers is outdated — and the companies that are growing fastest are the ones who’ve figured that out.
You don’t need to be a rocket scientist. You just need to be good at what you do and willing to apply it somewhere new.