Camille Bergin Named Chief Marketing Officer at Star Catcher
Company Hopes to Power the Next Era of Space
Camille Bergin has been tapped as the news Chief Marketing Officer at Star Catcher. The announcement marks a decisive moment for the company as it moves from concept to market reality.
“Space has never had a power grid. Star Catcher is building one — and that sentence alone should stop every satellite operator, investor, and policymaker in their tracks.”
Camille Bergin, Star Catcher
The company’s orbital network beams concentrated solar energy directly to satellites, delivering up to 10 times more on-demand power with zero retrofit required. Star Catcher is providing the breakthrough layer the industry has been lacking, ushering in the next industrial revolution with extended capabilities and innovation in space.
While serving as founder and CEO of Modulate Media, the technical marketing firm behind Star Catcher’s 2025 brand and website refresh, Bergin also acted as Fractional CMO at Star Catcher since November 2024. Bergin will now take the helm as full-time CMO, leading Star Catcher’s full-stack marketing and communications to accelerate brand awareness, market adoption, and category leadership in orbital energy utilities.
“Space has never had a power grid. Star Catcher is building one — and that sentence alone should stop every satellite operator, investor, and policymaker in their tracks,” said Bergin. “My job is to make sure it does. The technology here is genuinely category-defining, and I’m not going to let it be the best-kept secret in the industry.”
Bergin’s career is a through-line from hands-on space engineering to global industry influence. She began as an aerospace engineer at Lockheed Martin Space, supporting high-profile national security programs and NASA’s Orion spacecraft, the recently-launched lunar fly-by mission currently returning humanity to the Moon. She later drove advanced in-space refueling business development at Orbit Fab and built the foundational marketing organization at Vast Space during the commercial space station company’s explosive first phase of growth.
In parallel, she built The Galactic Gal into the largest independent space media platform in the world, with nearly one million followers, coverage in The New York Times and The Washington Post, and keynote stages across four continents. She made history as the first digital creator to partner with the United States Space Force, with her coverage of the Artemis I and James Webb launches reaching nearly 100 million people organically.
Her thesis — that the space industry’s greatest risk isn’t technical, but communicative — has sparked widespread debate across the global space economy and helped catalyze a broader industry-wide shift in marketing and communications. As she has championed, technical excellence alone is no longer enough; success now depends on the ability to clearly articulate value, influence stakeholders, and shape the narrative driving the future of space.
“Our priority is making sure this breakthrough technology reaches the right partners, customers, and decision-makers at exactly the right time,” said Star Catcher CEO Andrew Rush. “Camille will be critical in strengthening our market leadership as we accelerate the development of a space-based energy grid that will redefine how the industry operates.”
For the space economy to reach its full potential, satellites need more power. As it is, today’s satellites can’t generate enough power to meet the demands of modern missions, from orbital data centers and direct-to-cell to AI-driven Earth observation and agile defense maneuvering. Star Catcher is delivering beamed power to customer spacecraft across key sectors with stronger connectivity, faster insights, and more resilient infrastructure back on Earth.



