I only have experience with Zeitview, but I would say no. Zeitview competes with a lot of other companies for work. Most of their jobs are listed in the 70-100 range, at least in this area, but they boost the price when no one takes it, which is when I sometimes take them. Most of my commercial work comes from other companies and all of it is sporadic. Zeitview also doesn't let you set up your own jobs and to put it nicely, may not be all that expert in setting them up. Out of the 9 jobs I've done for them in the last year, 2 have been cancelled on the day of the event, because they tried to handle their own authorizations and the airport didn't have them (I'm not going to say that I suspect they didn't file them but....). I've had to go back twice on 3 jobs, 1, because they didn't contact the right people and it was a critical infrastructure job, and 3 because of "wet pavement". On another one, they told me not to start without talking to a specific person (on this one, I used my WAA with the airport and handled the authorization anyway because they waited until one day before the visit to even list the job). That person was out of town for the weekend and knew nothing about the job. That one, I flew anyway. I don't sign up for any of their jobs where I have to drive more than 30 minutes, except for the commercial real estate ones. I've had much better luck with the people handling those, but again, I have to wait for the price to go up above my costs and give me a small profit. ...and then there was the last materials measuring job I did, where the client told me not to fly the route they had, because that wasn't where the product was...confusion ensued. I did what the client wanted and redesigned the route. I don't think Zeitview (then Dronebase) liked it very much.
You may make $500 a week, but not from just them. You will have to do a lot of other stuff to make that much regular money, dealing with the "cheaper" sections of the drone industry.
You are also dealing with competition in many sections of the country.
Remember also, that your overhead has to come out of that $500 per week too, especially vehicle costs. Most people I've run into in this industry have no idea how much their overhead is or even includes it.
You drive 50 miles to a job and vehicle costs are roughly $60 (government says 62.5 cents per mile), unless you own your vehicle already. You have to add in the cost of your drone and batteries (I figure about $3 per charge per battery). There there are taxes, phone, internet, etc (all stuff you need). So after driving 1 hour there, and hour back, 1 hour onsite, and 1/2 hour sending the data off (if you don't have to modify it), you are looking at $4 per hour for that $100 job. Whether you make any money at all or not will all depend on the distance to your job and whether you already own your vehicle,
What I'm saying is that your costs are as important as what they are paying, so make sure you know that before you commit to a lifestyle change.