Drying × Weaknesses: Creativity & Ideation
Jobs Following Established Methods Rather Than Ideation
This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work following established methods and procedures rather than ideation.
While creativity manifests in various ways, not all jobs constantly require new ideas. Rather, many jobs value accurately executing established methods and maintaining consistent quality. Additionally, carefully preserving and continuing good existing methods is an important contribution.
What matters is finding an environment that matches your working style. Producing steady results in stable environments is also a valuable strength. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such stability and reliability.
576 jobs found.
Filter Worker (Ceramics Manufacturing)
This occupation handles the processes from forming to drying, firing, and inspection of filters for filtration in ceramics manufacturing.
Filter Cleaning Worker
Worker who removes various filters used in factories or equipment, cleans, dries, and inspects them, and restores them to a reusable state.
Film Developer
Specialist who chemically processes the latent image exposed on film, performing fixing, washing, and drying to produce negatives or positives.
Film Base Manufacturing Worker (For Magnetic Tape, Movies and Photos)
Occupation of manufacturing film bases, which serve as base materials for magnetic tapes and films for movies and photos. Manages processes such as melting and extrusion of polymer raw materials, calendering, coating, and drying.
Envelope Thread Worker
A job that manufactures and processes thread-like paper products for envelopes from pulp and paper raw materials.
Envelope manufacturing worker
A manufacturing job that operates dedicated machines to mass-produce envelopes through paper cutting, folding processing, gluing, drying, and inspection.
Felt Finisher
Specializes in finishing processes for felt products, performing compression, shaping, surface treatment, etc., in manufacturing.
Felt Manufacturing Worker
Industrial occupation that manufactures felt fabric using wool or synthetic fibers as raw materials. Performs processes such as fiber cleaning, mixing, compression, forming, and drying using machines or manual labor.
Felt Manufacturing Equipment Operator
A job that operates and monitors felt manufacturing equipment to stably produce nonwoven felt products.
Shark fin processing worker
A craftsman who cleans, sorts, dries, heat-treats shark fins, etc., and processes them into a state ready for shipment as products.