Drone Market Research: Industrial Buyer’s Guide

Étude de marché sur les drones

Études de marché et stratégie internationales SIS

Le marché des drones est en croissance dans le monde entier  

Cette croissance est due à une augmentation significative de la popularité de l’utilisation commerciale des drones. Ces machines peuvent être utilisées dans plusieurs industries.

La forte demande et les faibles coûts de démarrage ont encouragé de nombreuses startups de drones. Plus il y a d’acteurs, plus la concurrence s’intensifie, ce qui rend plus difficile la gestion d’une entreprise de drones.

To maintain a strong position in the drone market, startups rely on market research. It’s the best way to stay ahead of the competition. Market research is about collecting and analyzing customer information. It helps you make your drone business the best it can be, which in turn enables you to increase revenue and sales.

Drone Market Research: How Industrial Leaders Capture the Unmanned Systems Opportunity

Drone market research now separates industrial buyers who scale unmanned systems from those who pilot indefinitely. The category has moved past curiosity. Procurement teams at utilities, mining operators, logistics integrators, and defense primes are building multi-year fleet plans, and the firms with sharper field intelligence are setting terms.

The opportunity is structural. Sensor payloads have improved, BVLOS (beyond visual line of sight) waivers are expanding, and total cost of ownership against manned alternatives has shifted decisively. What remains scarce is rigorous demand-side evidence: who buys, why, on what cycle, and against which competing capital projects.

Why Drone Market Research Now Drives Capital Allocation Decisions

Boards are no longer asking whether to deploy unmanned aerial systems. They are asking which use cases produce defensible returns and which vendor stacks survive a five-year horizon. That question cannot be answered with secondary reports.

The installed base analytics that matter sit inside operator workflows. A pipeline inspection program at a midstream operator looks nothing like a stockpile measurement program at an aggregates producer, even when both fly the same DJI Matrice or Skydio X10 airframe. The economics diverge at the software layer, the labor model, and the regulatory exposure.

According to SIS International Research, industrial buyers consistently overestimate hardware differentiation and underestimate the switching cost embedded in flight operations software, data pipelines, and pilot certification. The vendors winning multi-site rollouts compete on workflow integration, not airframe specs.

The Segmentation That Actually Predicts Buying Behavior

Conventional drone market research segments by industry vertical. That framing misleads. A more predictive cut separates buyers by mission profile and data destination.

Four segments hold up under primary research scrutiny:

Asset inspection operators. Utilities, midstream energy, telecom tower companies, and wind farm operators. They prioritize sensor fidelity, repeatability, and integration with GIS and asset management systems like IBM Maximo or SAP EAM. Procurement runs through engineering, not IT.

Survey and mapping users. Construction, mining, agriculture, and civil engineering. They buy photogrammetry and LiDAR workflows. Trimble, Esri, and Bentley dominate the downstream stack, which constrains drone vendor selection.

Logistics and delivery pilots. Last-mile and middle-mile operators evaluating Zipline, Wing, Matternet, and emerging Part 135 certificate holders. The unit economics question dominates: cost per delivery, payload constraints, and FAA waiver scope.

Defense and public safety. Loitering munitions, ISR (intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance), and counter-UAS systems. Procurement cycles run through DoD programs, Blue UAS lists, and NDAA Section 848 compliance. AeroVironment, Anduril, Shield AI, and Skydio anchor the category.

Segment Primary Buyer Decision Driver Cycle Length
Asset Inspection Engineering / Operations Workflow integration 9-18 months
Survey & Mapping Project Managers Software compatibility 3-9 months
Logistique Supply Chain Strategy Cost per delivery 18-36 months
Defense / Public Safety Program Office NDAA compliance, mission fit 24-60 months

Source: SIS International Research

What Rigorous Drone Market Research Looks Like in Practice

Off-the-shelf reports size the global market and stop. That output does not support a procurement decision, a market entry decision, or a competitive response. The evidence required sits with practitioners.

SIS conducts B2B expert interviews with chief pilots, fleet managers, FAA Part 107 instructors, and DoD program officers. We run competitive intelligence on vendor win rates by use case, supplier qualification audits on contract manufacturers in Shenzhen and Taipei, and market entry assessments for non-Chinese entrants navigating American Security Drone Act restrictions.

SIS International’s structured expert interviews with senior operators across North America and EMEA indicate that fleet standardization decisions hinge on three variables rarely captured in syndicated reports: data sovereignty requirements, pilot certification scalability, and aftermarket parts availability under sanctions scenarios.

The Regulatory and Geopolitical Variables That Shift Vendor Economics

The American Security Drone Act, NDAA Section 848, and Florida SB 44 have reshaped procurement for federal, state, and critical infrastructure buyers. DJI controls a dominant share of the global commercial market, but its position in U.S. public sector and regulated utility accounts has eroded. Skydio, Parrot, BRINC, and Teal have absorbed displaced demand.

Europe operates under EASA’s open, specific, and certified categories. The U.K. CAA runs a parallel regime. Brazil’s ANAC and Japan’s MLIT each impose distinct certification pathways. A multi-country fleet rollout requires regulatory mapping that most internal teams underestimate by a factor of three.

BVLOS waivers are the single largest variable in logistics economics. Operators holding Part 135 certificates with broad waiver scope command valuation premiums that pure-play hardware vendors cannot match.

The SIS Drone Opportunity Matrix

Industrial buyers evaluating fleet investment decisions benefit from a two-axis framework separating regulatory maturity from workflow integration depth.

Quadrant Profile Strategic Posture
High regulation / High integration Utility inspection, midstream energy Scale fleet, lock in software stack
High regulation / Low integration Defense, public safety Mission-specific procurement, NDAA-compliant only
Low regulation / High integration Construction, mining, agriculture Standardize on photogrammetry workflows
Low regulation / Low integration Marketing, real estate, events Tactical purchases, minimal capex

Source: SIS International Research

Where the Returns Concentrate

The largest unrealized value sits in three pockets. First, automated docking stations from American Robotics, Percepto, and DJI Dock paired with autonomous flight reduce labor cost per inspection by significant margins. Second, AI-driven defect detection on inspection imagery converts raw data into closed work orders inside CMMS platforms. Third, swarm coordination for survey and defense applications is moving from research to procurement.

Buyers who run rigorous drone market research before fleet commitment avoid two predictable mistakes: locking into proprietary data formats that strand their imagery, and selecting vendors whose supply chains fail NDAA or REACH compliance audits eighteen months later.

Key Questions

Études de marché et stratégie internationales SIS

The decision is no longer whether unmanned systems belong in the operating model. The decision is which use cases, which vendors, and which regulatory pathways produce compounding returns. That answer requires primary evidence from operators, regulators, and competitors. Drone market research grounded in expert interviews and competitive intelligence is the input that separates committed fleet buyers from perpetual pilots.

À propos de SIS International

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Photo de l'auteur

Ruth Stanat

Fondatrice et PDG de SIS International Research & Strategy. Forte de plus de 40 ans d'expertise en planification stratégique et en veille commerciale mondiale, elle est une référence mondiale de confiance pour aider les organisations à réussir à l'international.

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