target=”_blank”> target=”_blank”> wp-image-42446″ src=”http://dronelife.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Tremco-Roofing-SKyBEAM-UAV-1024×575.jpg” alt=”drone job” width=”420″ height=”236″ srcset=”//dronelife.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Tremco-Roofing-SKyBEAM-UAV-1024×575.jpg 1024w, //dronelife.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Tremco-Roofing-SKyBEAM-UAV-300×169.jpg 300w, //dronelife.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Tremco-Roofing-SKyBEAM-UAV-768×431.jpg 768w” sizes=”(max-width: 420px) 100vw, 420px”/>With the enactment of Part 107, the US expects thousands of new commercial drone operators to enter the market this year. The FAA predicts that 90% of those new operators will be small businesses. Even with extensive flight experience and an FAA certificate, how can drone businesses stand out among the competition? At our sister site, JobForDrones, we see hundreds of customers looking for operators, and their criteria are clear. Here are 5 skills you need to get a drone job today.
- Hone your business skills. Just like hiring any service provider for home or business, commercial drone customers are concerned about doing business with independent operators, and they will choose the provider who presents the most professional profile. Make sure that you have everything the customer expects ready to go: including standard contracts, proof of insurance, proof of your certification, a professional bid or estimate document, and any liability waivers that you might require. You might want to invest in a drone lawyer to make sure you understand all of the issues – like the copyright laws on the images you produce, for example. And make sure that you have a payment system in place: larger customers expect you to be able to handle credit card or PO transactions.
 
- Learn how to package your final product. Many operators aren’t quite sure what to deliver when they take a job – and that causes problems for the customer. Learn to package your deliverable, and be very clear up front about what the customer is getting. What’s the platform that you will deliver on? If you are you delivering images, are they raw or edited? If you’re providing a different type of data, are you sending data to an analysis platform of the customer’s choice? Are you supposed to find a data analysis platform? If you’re not sure what’s reasonable, ask them what they the minimum requirement is – and try to do a little better than that. If you can, and the job lends itself to a package, offer a flat price. You may be able to do a little better that way, as customers often prefer a predictable expense to an hourly estimate that risks going over.
Commercial drones are gaining ground fast, as many industries realize the benefit that they provide. Drones can save money, time, and often offer a perspective or information that is otherwise unavailable. Customers are looking for operators to provide a product and help them understand what commercial drones can offer – and the business that does that best gets the job.