Uber for drone pilots. It’s a term I’ve heard thrown around for more than a decade. Many drone companies have tried it, but few have found success. FlyGuys is the latest company attempting it — and here’s a sign that they might actually be successful.
The Louisiana-based drone data platform announced today the close of its $13 million Series A-1 round, led by Kevin O’Leary’s Wonder Fund North Dakota (yes, that Kevin O’Leary from Shark Tank). It comes at an interesting time, as investor funding in not just the drone industry but the larger tech sector has been drying up.
Sure, it’s not billions — but for a Series A-1 round at a small drone startup — $13 million is no small potatoes. And even for drone pilots who might never actually work under FlyGuys, this piece of funding (and reinvigoration for a concept that’s been tried before) could have ripple effects for drone pilots everywhere.
What is FlyGuys, anyway?
FlyGuys is like the Uber for drone work. The company connects a network of what is currently more than 16,000 FAA-certified drone pilots with companies looking to collect real-world data. Projects are client-dependent, but they include tasks like using a drone for thermal scans of rooftops, inspecting cell towers or monitoring crops. For drone pilots, FlyGuys may provide a steady stream of jobs without the added tasks of sourcing their own clients. For enterprise clients and AI companies, it’s frictionless, API-connected access to visual data at scale.
So what makes FlyGuys different? After all, I’ve covered dozens of companies that purport to be “Uber for drone pilots” over the years. Unlike other gig economy platforms that can lean pretty impersonal, FlyGuys touts what it calls a “white-glove” approach to project coordination. In practical terms, it means clients get human support with software to streamline mission management and data delivery.
What does $13 million mean for the drone industry?
In short, more investor capital is a good sign for the drone industry. More money simply means more jobs, more tools and a bigger global footprint for drone service providers.
“This raise gives us the fuel to go global,” said Joe Stough, CEO of FlyGuys.
With fresh funding, Stough said the company plans to invest in international expansion, new software features for enterprise mission management and more marketing efforts to reach new clients—meaning more data seekers entering the drone space.
For drone pilots, this presents an opportunity to tap into a wider pool of gigs, potentially with less downtime between missions. That’s especially meaningful at a time when many drone pilots struggle to find consistent, well-paid work, often competing on price in saturated local markets.
FlyGuys also says it wants to focus on simplifying how drone pilots receive and complete jobs. That means faster onboarding, cleaner integrations and fewer tech headaches. For those Uber driver-like drone pilots, that’s a win in enabling them to spend less time fiddling with file formats — and to spend more time flying.
Kevin O’Leary’s big bet on drone data
Kevin O’Leary, the famed investor of Shark Tank fame, has been increasingly vocal about emerging technologies, like using drones to collect data for use in other AI tech.
“FlyGuys is creating the most scalable delivery platform for reality data on the market, an essential bridge between the physical world and the AI platforms shaping our future,” O’Leary said in a statement.
As AI models become more sophisticated, their hunger for high-quality real-world data — especially visual and spatial datasets — has exploded. Think: training self-driving algorithms, powering predictive maintenance in smart cities or improving agricultural yields. Drones are one of the most viable ways to collect that data.
O’Leary has been a supporter of drones in general. Examples include back in 2015, when O’Leary struck a preliminary deal on SharkTank with xCraft in an investment that valued that drone at $6 million.
A signal of what’s next
While the funding news is big, what matters more is what this round enables. FlyGuys is building tools that could lead to better overall infrastructure. That means more standardized workflows, more integration with AI platforms. It could even mean a new kind of global drone workforce.
If you’re a drone pilot, now’s the time to pay attention. Platforms like FlyGuys are shaping what the next generation of drone work looks like: less “gig,” more career. And if the company’s roadmap plays out, it could mean flying smarter — not harder — while accessing clients in sectors (and countries) you might never have imagined.
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The post FlyGuys raises $13 million to be Uber for drone pilots appeared first on The Drone Girl.