Mining — Go-to-Market Strategy
Research compiled: March 2026 | For: Drover Labs CEO
Key Conferences & Events
Tier 1 — Must Attend
MINExpo International
- Organized by: National Mining Association (NMA)
- Location: Las Vegas Convention Center
- Frequency: Every 4 years
- Last held: September 24–26, 2024 — drew 45,000+ attendees from 148 countries; 2,000 exhibitors; 825,000 sq ft exhibit space
- Next: 2028 (tentative)
- Who attends: Mining executives, mine managers, engineers, geologists, procurement
- Why: The world's largest mining event — "if it's mining, it lives here"
- Source: minexpo.com, NMA
SME Annual Conference & Expo (Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration)
- Organized by: SME (smenet.org)
- Location: Varies (Denver, Phoenix, Salt Lake City typical)
- Frequency: Annual (February/March)
- Attendees: ~8,000 mining engineers, geologists, academics
- Why: Technical audience — this is where mining engineers who write purchase specs gather
- Key: SME has formal underground mining and mine health/safety division committees
PDAC (Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada)
- Location: Toronto, Canada
- Frequency: Annual (March)
- Attendees: ~25,000 from 130 countries
- Focus: Exploration and junior miners — good for Canadian market entry
- Buyer profile: Exploration managers, JV decision-makers
Tier 2 — High Value for Mining Tech
IMARC (International Mining and Resources Conference)
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Frequency: Annual (October/November)
- Attendees: ~7,000 from 100 countries
- Focus: Australian and Asia-Pacific mining — excellent for Rio Tinto, BHP, Newmont territory
The Electric Mine Conference
- Location: Rotating (Perth 2024, 2025)
- Focus: Underground electrification and autonomy — directly overlaps with Drover's value prop
- Buyer type: Innovation and technology VPs at major miners
ISEE (International Society of Explosives Engineers)
- Focus: Blasting and post-blast operations — directly relevant to stope inspection use case
Hoist & Haul (SME)
- Focus: Underground transportation and infrastructure — good for tunnel inspection
Tier 3 — Niche but Targeted
MINEXCHANGE (annual SME event) Underground Construction Technology (UCT) — tunnel inspection CONEXPO-CON/AGG — broader construction/mining crossover AusIMM (Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy) — Australia/NZ
Industry Associations
| Association | Relevance | Membership Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| NMA (National Mining Association) | US lobby group; owns MINExpo | Access to major US miners; regulatory input |
| SME (Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration) | Technical body, 15,000 members | Conference access; technical credibility |
| NMA Safety Committee | Direct interface with MSHA | Policy influence on robot certification |
| MSHA stakeholder groups | Regulatory engagement | Shaping underground robotics rules |
| MCA (Minerals Council of Australia) | Australian major miners | BHP, Rio Tinto, Newmont access |
| MAC (Mining Association of Canada) | Canadian majors | Agnico Eagle, Barrick, Kinross access |
| AusIMM | Australian technical mining body | Peer credibility in Australia |
| CAMIRO (Canadian Mining Innovation Council) | R&D partnerships | Co-development grants with miners |
| CRC ORE (Australia) | Australian mining R&D cooperative | Co-development with Australian miners |
Who Makes Buying Decisions at Mining Companies
Decision Structure (Tier 1 Miners: BHP, Rio Tinto, Newmont, Barrick, Agnico Eagle)
1. Mine Manager / General Manager (Site Level)
- Has authority to approve pilot programs up to ~$50K–$200K
- Pain: "My surveyors are spending hours in dangerous zones and I lose production time"
- Key trigger: MSHA/safety incident, insurance pressure, near-miss event
- Approves: One-day trial ($15K) and short-term pilots
2. Mine Surveyor / Chief Surveyor
- Technical champion — they experience the daily pain
- Most likely to have heard of Emesent/Exyn — understand the technology
- Will advocate internally for adoption
- Can be found at SME conferences and LinkedIn mining groups
3. VP Technology / Head of Digital (Innovation Function)
- Manages the digital twin, automation, and innovation portfolio
- Authority to approve $500K–$5M contracts
- Thinking about: vendor consolidation, data platform integration, digital twin ROI
- Profile: Often a young (35–45) engineer with MBA; tech-forward
4. VP Safety / Head of Health & Safety
- Key decision-maker when fatality/injury is the primary driver
- MSHA compliance pressure lands on their desk
- Approves technology if it demonstrably reduces worker exposure
- Language to use: "worker exposure hours eliminated," "zero-harm contribution"
5. Procurement / Supply Chain
- Controls the PO process — critical for closing deals
- Mining majors have approved vendor lists — Drover needs to be on them
- Contract terms: Often require ISO 9001, liability insurance ($5M+ coverage), local support
Decision Timeline for Mining Purchases
- Awareness → Interest: 3–6 months (conference, referral, LinkedIn)
- Trial/Pilot: 1–3 months (one-day demo → week-long pilot)
- Internal evaluation: 3–6 months (procurement review, IT security, engineering sign-off)
- Contract: 2–4 months (legal, vendor qualification)
- Total sales cycle: 9–18 months for Tier 1 miners
Shortcut: Junior and Mid-Tier Miners
- Tier 2/3 miners (Kinross, First Majestic, Fortuna Silver, SSR Mining) have faster decisions
- Often site-level managers can approve $50–200K
- More willing to trial unproven tech than majors
- Recommendation: Get 2–3 mid-tier mine references first; use to crack majors
How to Get Pilot Deals
The One-Day Trial Play ($15K)
This is Drover's strongest GTM tool. Mining companies are notoriously conservative, and $15K for a one-day trial is below budget authority for a mine manager at most sites. Key elements:
- Pre-work: Call site surveyor, identify ONE specific high-value problem (a stope that hasn't been surveyed in 6 months because it's too dangerous)
- Day of trial: Deploy in that exact stope; deliver 3D point cloud and 360° inspection report same day
- Report: Show before/after comparison; calculate the production delay cost that was eliminated
- Follow-up: Within 48 hours, present the monthly contract proposal
Expected conversion rate from good trial: 30–50% (if problem-solution fit is right)
Lead Generation Channels
-
Direct outreach on LinkedIn: Mine surveyors, mine managers, VP Technology at mid-tier miners
- Search: "mine surveyor" + "underground" + [company name]
- Message: "Saw your post about [stope inspection issue] — we can do that in 15 minutes with a robot"
-
Conference booth/speaking at SME: Get on the technical session agenda for underground mining automation
-
MSHA compliance angle: Reach out to mines that received citations for inadequate workplace examinations (MSHA data is public at msha.gov) — they need compliance tools NOW
-
Partner with mine technology consultants: Companies like SCS Engineers (both at MINExpo 2024), Barr Engineering, AMC Consultants — they advise miners on tech adoption
-
Cold outreach via Engineering Firms: Parsons, AECOM, WSP have mining divisions that specify technology on new mine projects
Priority Target Companies for First Pilots
These are companies that have already invested in drone/robot technology, proving innovation appetite:
| Company | Why Target | HQ |
|---|---|---|
| Agnico Eagle | Already using Exyn AND Emesent; tech-forward; Nunavut + Canada operations | Toronto, Canada |
| Northern Star Resources | Uses Exyn at Pogo Mine (Alaska) | Perth, Australia |
| LKAB | Uses Elios 3 at Kiruna; Swedish, large budget | Luleå, Sweden |
| Ascot Resources | Early Exyn adopter; Premier Mine BC reopening | Vancouver, Canada |
| Kinross Gold | Active innovation program; multiple underground mines globally | Toronto, Canada |
| First Majestic Silver | Mexico operations; mid-tier, faster decisions | Vancouver, Canada |
| Coeur Mining | US-based underground silver/gold; innovation-friendly | Chicago, US |
| Hecla Mining | US-based underground silver; Lucky Friday Mine, Greens Creek | Coeur d'Alene, US |
The Regulatory Angle (US Only)
- MSHA requires mines to demonstrate safe working places before each shift
- A robot that can certify a working place faster and safer than a human examiner = direct compliance value
- Target: Mines with recent MSHA "significant and substantial" (S&S) violations related to inadequate workplace examinations
- This reframes Drover as compliance infrastructure, not just a productivity tool
Pricing Strategy Context
Current Market Reference Points
- Emesent Hovermap: $34–51K to buy hardware (no RaaS model)
- Exyn: Unknown; likely similar capital purchase
- Flyability Elios 3: $80K purchase; no monthly service
- Spot: $75K–150K purchase; ~$10K/month for RaaS
What Drover Offers
- $15K one-day trial — unique in the market; lowest barrier to entry
- $5K–10K/month ongoing — competitive with Spot RaaS; includes full service + data delivery
- Value to mine: Replacing a 4-person survey team for 2 days/week saves $15–30K/month in labor and risk exposure
How to Frame the ROI Pitch
Scenario: Stope volume reconciliation
- Traditional method: 2–4 hours, 2-person team, re-entry after blast wait period, incomplete data
- Drover: 15–30 minutes, 0 personnel in hazardous zone, complete data
- Labor cost avoided: 2 people × 3 hours × $75/hr = $450/mission
- Risk: If a ground fall injures a surveyor: $500K–$2M workers comp + production stoppage
- At 2 missions/week: $3,600/month in labor savings, near-zero risk exposure
- Drover at $5K/month pays for itself if it prevents one injury event per year
Scenario: MSHA compliance examination
- Mines required to inspect each working place every shift
- 10 active headings × 3 shifts × 20 min/inspection = 100 person-hours/day
- Drover reduces each inspection to 5 min autonomous run: saves 75 person-hours/day
- At $75/hr fully loaded: $5,625/day in labor savings
- This alone justifies $5K–10K/month subscription easily