Quality Manager × Strengths: Stress Tolerance

For Those with High Stress Tolerance

This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable responding calmly in pressured situations.

Ways of coping with stress vary from person to person. Some channel pressure into heightened focus, while others calmly analyze situations and respond. Also, having high stress tolerance does not mean it's okay to push yourself too hard. Having stress management methods that work for you and taking rest when needed are also important skills.

The jobs introduced here tend to involve more pressured situations or require responsive capabilities. Find a place where you can utilize your composure and responsiveness.

77 jobs found.

Glass Products Forming Worker

A manufacturing worker who shapes molten glass into predetermined forms using molds or blow pipes and performs quality inspections up to that point.

Glass Melting Worker (Ceramics Raw Materials)

A craft worker who uses a high-temperature furnace to melt glass raw materials and produce homogeneous molten glass.

Grit Blasting Worker (Casting Manufacturing)

This occupation involves blasting grit (abrasive material) at high pressure in the casting manufacturing process to remove scale and dirt from metal surfaces, preparing them for easy painting or finishing in subsequent processes.

Grit Blast Worker (Excluding Casting Manufacturing)

A job that operates grit blasting machines to remove rust, scale, and old paint films from surfaces of metals, concrete, etc., and performs base preparation for painting and coating.

Pipe Jointer (Forge Welding)

A metalworking technical job that heats pipe fittings to high temperatures and joins them using forging methods.

Optical Glass Melting Worker

Manufacturing job that melts high-purity glass for optical lenses in a high-temperature furnace, handling everything from composition adjustment to pouring.

Aircraft Cabin Cleaner

After an aircraft lands, clean and prepare the cabin within the limited time until the next departure to provide passengers with a comfortable and safe environment.

Synthetic Resin Manufacturing Worker

Synthetic resin manufacturing workers blend raw materials, control polymerization reactions to produce synthetic resins as polymers, and handle the pre-processes for molding and processing.

Synthetic Fiber Manufacturing Engineer (Excluding Production Engineers)

A technical job that operates and manages processes from raw material blending to polymerization, spinning, processing, and quality inspection to manufacture synthetic fibers such as polyester and nylon.

Call Center Operator

A job that responds to customer inquiries, requests, and complaints via phone or internet, providing information and solving problems.