Product Inspection Workers (Excluding Metal and Food Products) X Weaknesses: Numerical & Quantitative Analysis
Jobs Utilizing Other Abilities with Less Numerical Work
This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work utilizing language and interpersonal skills rather than working with numbers.
The need for mathematical thinking varies by occupation. Many jobs value other abilities - language skills, interpersonal abilities, sensitivity, creativity - more than numbers and calculations. Additionally, in some fields, qualitative judgment and understanding of human relationships are the most valuable assets.
What matters is finding an environment where you can utilize your strengths. Various abilities beyond numbers also hold important value in society. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such diverse strengths.
64 matching jobs found.
Abrasive Cloth and Paper Inspector
This occupation involves visually inspecting and using measuring instruments to check the finish and quality of abrasive cloth and paper during the manufacturing process, and sorting out non-standard and defective products.
Plywood Sorter (Plywood Manufacturing)
This occupation involves visually and mechanically inspecting plywood transported from the production line, determining quality, and removing and classifying non-standard products.
Finishing Cheese Inspector (Spinning)
A quality inspection role that visually inspects and uses simple measurements to check yarn products wound into cheese shapes after the spinning process, removing defective items.
Lacquerware Inspector
Inspect the appearance and finish of completed lacquerware products through visual and tactile inspection, determine and record defects. Responsible for maintaining product quality on production lines or in inspection areas.
Tablet Sorting Worker
A job that involves sorting and removing substandard products and items contaminated with foreign objects using visual inspection or machinery on tablet manufacturing lines.
Woven Fabric Flaw Remover
A job that visually inspects woven fabrics, detects defects such as weaving flaws or color unevenness, and removes them.
Woven Fabric Inspector
A job that inspects the appearance, weave pattern, color unevenness, stains, etc., of woven fabric products to check if they meet quality standards.
Woven Fabric Inspection Finisher
A manufacturing job responsible for inspecting the quality of woven fabrics visually or with measuring instruments and handling the finishing process.
Woven Fabric Knot Remover
Woven fabric knot removal workers visually inspect and remove knots (knots or defects in the weave) in woven fabric products during the manufacturing process of textile products, maintaining high-quality textile products as specialists.
Bookbinding Inspector
A profession that visually inspects books and booklets after the bookbinding process, checks page order, binding strength, printing quality, etc., and sorts out defective products.