Product Manufacturing and Processing Workers (Excluding Metal and Food Products) X Weaknesses: Analytical & Logical Thinking

Jobs with Less Emphasis on Analytical & Logical Thinking

This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work using intuition and experience rather than logical analysis.

While analytical skills and logical thinking are needed in many jobs, their importance and required form vary significantly by occupation. Some jobs value field experience and intuitive judgment more than detailed data analysis. Additionally, in some fields, sensitivity and understanding of human relationships are prioritized over logic.

What matters is finding an environment where you can utilize your strengths. Not being analytical isn't a weakness - it means you perceive things differently and can create value in other ways. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such diverse strengths.

412 matching jobs found.

Rain Shoe Manufacturing Worker (Rubber)

This occupation manufactures rain shoes (boots) using rubber materials. It handles the entire process from raw material preparation to molding, vulcanization, finishing, inspection, and packaging.

Brick Mold Press Worker

Occupation involving pressing raw materials into molds (molds) for stone products such as bricks to shape them.

Brick and Tile Cutter

Occupation that cuts and processes fired bricks and tiles to specified dimensions.

Brick and Tile Kiln Loader/Unloader

Job that involves loading raw products such as bricks and tiles into kilns and removing them after firing.

Brick Finisher

Factory worker who performs finishing on fired bricks and handles inspection, sorting, and packing.

Roll Worker (Raw Rubber Processing)

A job that operates roll machines to roll raw rubber into uniform sheet forms.

Rosashi Embroiderer

Traditional craft technician who embroiders patterns on thin silk fabric called 'ro'.

Dress Shirt Tailoring and Sewing Worker (One Who Tailors Throughout)

Occupation responsible for pattern making to cutting, sewing, and press finishing of dress shirts throughout.

Cotton Stuffing Worker

A profession that stuffs cotton or synthetic cotton into fabric products, sews them together, and manufactures stuffed futons, clothing items, etc.

Cotton Refilling Worker

A manufacturing job that removes old cotton from cotton products such as futons and cushions, fills them with new cotton, and finishes them.