Drone flying business..
Drone flying business..
Author
Discussion

D1on

Original Poster:

810 posts

203 months

Wednesday 25th November 2020
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Anyone any experience of this?
Either weddings or photography flying a drone to make money?...

Nickyboy

6,756 posts

251 months

Wednesday 25th November 2020
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Need to get your licence first. Friend of mine does it, uses it as a second job as everybody is doing it without proper certifications

surveyor

18,425 posts

201 months

Wednesday 25th November 2020
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Rules are changing shortly, which is good as current laws make it hard to do legally in built up areas.

Every man and his dog at it without a license and undercutting each other.

New rules I think require newer models which may or may not exist or a different qualification.

My view is it’s good as an addon or a usp, but too many others in your target area.

Simpo Two

89,526 posts

282 months

Wednesday 25th November 2020
quotequote all
D1on said:
Anyone any experience of this?
Either weddings or photography flying a drone to make money?...
It will come down to how good you are at marketing and sales - and at getting high quality shots from drones of course. Unless you're only shooting stills, an element of video direction is needed too. Will your footage be edited into ground-based footage or are you going to wizz it around a bit and call it done?

surveyor

18,425 posts

201 months

Wednesday 25th November 2020
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
D1on said:
Anyone any experience of this?
Either weddings or photography flying a drone to make money?...
It will come down to how good you are at marketing and sales - and at getting high quality shots from drones of course. Unless you're only shooting stills, an element of video direction is needed too. Will your footage be edited into ground-based footage or are you going to wizz it around a bit and call it done?
It will come down to how many beans he will work for as every man and dog will be offering it for peanuts.

Phunk

2,063 posts

188 months

Wednesday 25th November 2020
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You need a USP, the market is crowded.

If you have no background in engineering/surveying/film making and are just thinking of buying a drone to make some money it’s not going to work for you.

StevieBee

14,318 posts

272 months

Thursday 26th November 2020
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I use a Drone as part of what I do. Part of what I do is photography and videography so the Drone is more a flying camera - a means to grab a different viewpoint rather than flying it for the sake of it just because you have it.

So as someone mentioned, if you're already a photographer or videographer then having a Drone is a useful addition to your arsenal of equipment and enables to you keep the work 'in-house'.

The same applies to survey work where you might otherwise have subbed such a service out to a provider.

Commercial (and successful) Drone Operator businesses are not exactly plentiful but then neither is demand. Those that I know of that make a decent wedge work in the Film and TV industry - but they are using top-drawer gear as well as other specialist services such as mobile boom arms (Matt Black Mercedes SUV with a camera hanging off a crane attached to the roof). These guys will have been using Drones since before Mr Mavic was out of nappies and get their work from mates they've built up over many years.

There is some opportunity out there but it's immeasurably more involved than buying a Mavic Pro 2 and running off some business cards. You also need to understand far more than how to fly a Drone: RAW processing, D-Log, Colour Grading, 4K management, Frame Rates as well as have the means to process the image files...... You have to think of it as a photography business first, Drone; second.

In your quest for further insight, I would strongly advise against joining any of the Facebook Drone groups!!

HTH


Edited by StevieBee on Thursday 26th November 11:37

Equus

16,980 posts

118 months

Thursday 26th November 2020
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surveyor said:
It will come down to how many beans he will work for as every man and dog will be offering it for peanuts.
We use the services of such companies from time to time, and I have to say that it's both embarrassing (compared to the fees we and every other consultant charges) and depressing (empathising with the drone company) how cheaply you can get it done these days.

Last one we had done (aerial images of a car park in Barnsley for a Planning application) cost £150 for what will have amounted to half a day's work.

Frimley111R

17,451 posts

251 months

Thursday 26th November 2020
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This is the same challenge that faces a great many industries, there's always someone offering a service for next to nothing. However, market yourself to premium clients and you won't compete with the guy who was bored and decided to film a few things with his drone for a few quid. Perhaps offer editing or production services too by tying up with a company that does that.

vaguelyfamiliar

64 posts

162 months

Thursday 26th November 2020
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As said above, every man and his dog has a Mavic and shooting - often illegally - for peanuts. Adding a drone to an existing photography business is a better route, again, as pointed out above, the new rules make flying legally in built up areas simpler.

I had memorable enquiry from a school to capture some shots of the entire school as part of 50th anniversary celebrations (think kids all lined up in the number 50). My quote was roundly rejected with the words, oh that’s higher than we expected, one of the parents on the PTA has a drone, and will do it for £30

I did my PfCO 3 years ago and quickly realised that the photography side of things was never going to be a massive money spinner. As a result, I have invested heavily in enterprise grade kit, including ground and aerial thermal sensors and training - prompted by the advice received on a thread I started on here, I’ve now completed my BINDT accreditation in thermography, shortly to complete ISO 6781 in building thermography, then on to surveying qualifications. (Anyone need a thermal building survey smile )

996Type

992 posts

169 months

Thursday 26th November 2020
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Agree with the poster above, the main areas to focus on now are specialisms.

There are great strides being made in agricultural, 3D scanning, inspection, etc that are still being explored.

Photography is very saturated and lots of operators are flying illegally without understanding the huge risks they present to safety in aviation terms. The specialist kit is multiples more expensive which limits those that have it. Some kit can be £3M+ at the top end.

The U.K. is very forward thinking in terms of operations, even if we don’t necessarily lead the way in manufacturing.

The cost of entry continues to fall and training has never been more accessible, but a large number of qualified operators fall off the map at renewal time every year because they can’t make a go at it. The majority of successful ones are using drones to supplement their existing work tasks with aerial services and these tend to be the most successful.

Beyond visual line of site will be another step change in operations but I expect there will be ramifications to the airspace you fly in at this stage and the whole piece will become much more tightly controlled.

It’s always interesting to view the approved CAA operators list to see the caliber and type of major organisations that are currently trialling the technology.
You can view this list on the CAA website.

Brexit decoupling has slightly hindered the progress we may have made but this seems pretty much resolved in terms of aviation now. The coming decade is expected to be a boom for the industry but around innovation and new applications. It’s worth getting the approval in my view as you need to be in the industry to understand the trends and potential opportunities that you don’t see if your not part of it.


Simpo Two

89,526 posts

282 months

Thursday 26th November 2020
quotequote all
vaguelyfamiliar said:
My quote was roundly rejected with the words, oh that’s higher than we expected, one of the parents on the PTA has a drone, and will do it for £30
I might have replied 'I have an English O-Level. I'll teach your kids English for £30, much less than one of your teachers'. But they wouldn't understand.

iphonedyou

9,952 posts

174 months

Thursday 26th November 2020
quotequote all
Equus said:
We use the services of such companies from time to time, and I have to say that it's both embarrassing (compared to the fees we and every other consultant charges) and depressing (empathising with the drone company) how cheaply you can get it done these days.

Last one we had done (aerial images of a car park in Barnsley for a Planning application) cost £150 for what will have amounted to half a day's work.
As an owner of a QS and PM consultancy, I find construction industry consultancy fees depressing!

smile

Edited by iphonedyou on Thursday 26th November 22:51

Frimley111R

17,451 posts

251 months

Friday 27th November 2020
quotequote all
vaguelyfamiliar said:
I had memorable enquiry from a school to capture some shots of the entire school as part of 50th anniversary celebrations (think kids all lined up in the number 50). My quote was roundly rejected with the words, oh that’s higher than we expected, one of the parents on the PTA has a drone, and will do it for £30
Reminds me of companies who have relatives/someone's son/daughter etc. who can 'do a website' for them, despite the companies turning over hundreds of thousands or millions of pounds!

StevieBee

14,318 posts

272 months

Friday 27th November 2020
quotequote all
Frimley111R said:
vaguelyfamiliar said:
I had memorable enquiry from a school to capture some shots of the entire school as part of 50th anniversary celebrations (think kids all lined up in the number 50). My quote was roundly rejected with the words, oh that’s higher than we expected, one of the parents on the PTA has a drone, and will do it for £30
Reminds me of companies who have relatives/someone's son/daughter etc. who can 'do a website' for them, despite the companies turning over hundreds of thousands or millions of pounds!
I'll just leave this here for your perusal smile

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VfprIxNfCjk


Equus

16,980 posts

118 months

Friday 27th November 2020
quotequote all
iphonedyou said:
As an owner of a QS and PM consultancy...
Slight thread derailment, but where are you based and what geographic area do you cover?

vaguelyfamiliar

64 posts

162 months

Friday 27th November 2020
quotequote all
StevieBee said:
I'll just leave this here for your perusal smile

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VfprIxNfCjk
biggrin

Unrealistic though, his requirements were far too detailed

Frimley111R

17,451 posts

251 months

Friday 27th November 2020
quotequote all
vaguelyfamiliar said:
StevieBee said:
I'll just leave this here for your perusal smile

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VfprIxNfCjk
biggrin

Unrealistic though, his requirements were far too detailed
It's old but it also never gets old!

His Lordship

2,347 posts

187 months

Wednesday 9th December 2020
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I jumped in back when it first became "a thing" , got my PFAW etc...

However it quickly became evident that it was nearly impossible to actually get any paid work in as everyone was at it.
Just finding leads was an epic task.

Didnt bother renewing my PFAW/PFCO.

D1on

Original Poster:

810 posts

203 months

Thursday 31st December 2020
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How will the new rules affect it from a commercial point of view?..
Will it be easier or harder to get in to?...