Hi lownslow79,
I searched for banner and pipe work extensively during 2009/2010 and was also looking towards dropping meat bombs as this is something I once had received training for.
Hard fact was that the potential employers (90%) of the time looked at whatever time I had (+1000) and I found that quite a few high time jockeys had snagged all the decent jobs with thousands of hours to boot. You can test it: When the employer asks for your total time, make up some number. You'll find that what they've been getting resume's from is much higher than that. Besides lousy pay, the attitude towards the pilot populace was mainly focused on three things:
1. You're a time builder no matter how much time you have. It's an entry level job, and people actually race to do it for free.
2. Training & employment contracts and in many cases training was not only not free, it was charged for, healthily, which helps to understand why some of the banner tow operations keep advertising open positions but when you call it's $3000+ whatever time they "think you need" with no actual guaranteed minimum afterwards. If they actually had work and banner tow contracts they would not need to hire new pilots in every circulation of trade a plane.
3. Jobs go to whoever has their resume walked into the place by someone who's been in that company for a while or personally knows the owner.
Many of these companies adjusted to this bottomless pool of fresh bodies in the pilot world after the 300 hour copilot wonder bubble burst, when flight schools and regular operations could not hold on to a pilot whenever someone mentioned the word flying, jets, multi engine or airline. A student I knew gained attention from 6 different instructors within 3 months, before the owner took the student on himself. CFI's were dropping out to go hunt bigger game every week. No loyalty and certainly do dedication towards anything. How eager would you be to pay someone well, who might leave tomorrow with no notice, just because some fly by night shady operation next door is looking to fill a seat? Not easy to run a business that flies for a living if your pilots are job hunting constantly. Even if you point out to your prospective employer that you are dedicated and plan to stick around, there may just be someone else sitting in the next state over, willing to do the work for less or free. For dropzones you often need the magic 25 hours in type (182 or 206) and if the operation asks you to just pencil whip the time in your logbook for insurance satisfaction, it's time to RUN, not walk from the operation. Instead, offer to come to an agreement to build the time with them. Depending on your complex and high performance time, every insurance company WILL work with the operation. It can be done, with the benefit of them training you to what exactly they want you to do.
The employment contracts and training contracts usually do no good to the losing operation, because they will dig into a naked mans pockets when that person leaves prematurely. Naked man knows that and happily signs the contract. A very good friend of mine recently applied for and interviewed with a turbine timeshare outfit. 5 digits with tons of multi PIC time even in 121 and they turned him down cold. I had told him to look for interview gauges, but it seems as if he wasn't to excited about it. He is dead on convinced that he was turned down for less than stellar reasons, one of which was that he did not beg for the amazing opportunity to fly a single turbine tube. The interviewer rattled off questions from a sheet of paper and probably never realized that the pilot he was interviewing had been around the bush before. The pay was meager enough not to jump through hoops to get the job, though.
I used to have FAAST Master Wings on my resume until a friend told me to take any and all references to the FAA O.F.F. anything used to apply for any job.
"People think you are a mule for the FAA the second you show any reference to them and that may help land your resume in the trashcan." Funnily DPE's are often great resources if you take the time to get to know them and they had an opportunity to fly with you.
This is long, but I don't want to look like I am just venting, and give you my perspective of around 650 hours and 150+ multi but no CFI.
Depending on your location the CFI is the only way to go. Amazingly there is no lower limit with which you can gain employment to teach others how to fly, but you'd also have to consider a potentially quite pricey relocation to some place where there is some vibrant aviation going on, if it's not in your neck of the woods.
If you're looking to clear money quick in aviation, you're trying to nail a raw egg to a railroad track without breaking it.
The last and final tip, I've met more people who have made it well in aviation at the marina when they're putting their boat in the water, compared to the airport.
Had I taken the advise from some 3 years ago, I'd still be traveling the country, knocking on doors in AK or the plains to be "on location" when someone decides to hire.
A kid on jetcareers recently asked about dropping chutes on tips (no pay) and despite the outcry of selling his soul to the devil landed a well paying job in a decent operation.
Other than that, I'd go into sales, automotive service in any dealership, or consider shift work at a nearby factory. I was able to clear 25K in 6 months working nights at a clothing distributor and days at a gas station. 19 hours a day, 6 days a week will do wonders in the bank, because you actually can't stay awake to do stupid stuff with your money when you're not working. Selling Toyota's and Honda's always pays well, too. If need be, you could make and clear that money as an assistant manager at McDonalds with another side job and never leave the area.
Good luck!
"Integrity Is A Choice. It is consistently choosing the simplicity and purity of truth over popularity." ~ Unknown