Manufacturing Site Manager × Strengths: Attention to Detail & Accuracy

For Those Strong in Attention to Detail & Accuracy

This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable paying attention to details and working accurately.

Situations requiring accuracy exist in many jobs, but their degree and nature vary. Some situations demand numerical accuracy, while others require precision in language or movement. While pursuing perfection is important, discerning the appropriate level of accuracy for each situation is also a valuable skill.

The jobs introduced here tend to offer more opportunities to utilize attention to detail and accuracy. Explore where your thoroughness can create value.

16 jobs found.

Fillet Worker

This occupation involves breaking down seafood such as fish, removing bones and skin, and processing it into fillets.

Blind Assembler (Metal)

A manufacturing job that assembles parts of metal blinds, adjusts and inspects them, and ships them as finished products.

Sandblaster (Foundry Manufacturing)

This occupation involves blasting abrasive materials at high pressure onto castings in foundry manufacturing for deburring, surface roughening, and pre-treatment before painting.

Winder (Plywood Manufacturing)

This occupation handles manufacturing tasks where thinly sliced wood sheets (veneer) are fed into a winding machine, wound into rolls with uniform thickness and tension, and supplied to subsequent processes.

Sewing Machine Name Processor

A job that uses industrial embroidery sewing machines to embroider names, logos, patches, etc., on clothing, towels, hats, and more.

Roving Worker (Glass Fiber Manufacturing)

A job that manufactures fibrous bundles (roving) from molten glass fiber, operates manufacturing equipment, and performs quality control.