ClusterOS Diagnostic Profile
Thames Valley Space
Thames Valley Space draws £1.13bn of UKRI lead-led funding across 8,915 grants, anchored by Oxford (76%), Surrey (14%).
The cluster shows medium-confidence "Forgiving instead of redesigning" and "Stabilising around incumbents" behaviour — research narrative is reinforced by recurring programme launches rather than narrowing toward commercial scaling, with academic capacity reabsorbing the cluster's signal.
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Same data examined through five diagnostic lenses — Pipeline, Leverage, Triple Helix, Throughput, Collaboration. The interactive diagnostic is currently in private preview.
Sources: UKRI Gateway to Research (grants, outcomes); OpenAlex (publications); Companies House (spin-out lifecycle); DSIT (cluster mapping); Public investment data. Snapshot May 2026.
Stabilisation stacks · Why single interventions fail
Coordination generates reports; reports justify programme activity; programme activity generates coordination requirements; all three signals absorbed simultaneously making the system self-referential.
"If one external funder (e.g., venture capital firm, international space agency) publicly refused to participate in coordination mechanisms (Space South Central, Space Skills Alliance) and instead required direct behavioural evidence (e.g., customer contracts, revenue data, technical milestones) as funding criteria, it might reduce the system's ability to absorb pressure through coordination and reporting cycles."
Leverage hypotheses are testable perturbations, not prescriptions. Where demand-side behaviour is weakly visible, the correct move is observation — improving visibility before attempting change.
Structural resemblances · Clusters with similar stall configurations
A full ClusterOS diagnostic adds actor questionnaire data, working sessions, and anchor interviews — producing higher-confidence stall identification, board-ready stack analysis, and leverage hypotheses calibrated to your specific context.