Inspection × 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.
926 jobs found.
Surface Mine Cableway Operator
Occupation involving operating cableway equipment in the surface areas of mines or factories to safely transport materials and personnel.
Optical Lens Production Engineer
Designs and manages the production processes from forming to polishing, coating, and inspection of optical lenses, mass-producing high-precision lenses as a technical job.
Steel pipe manufacturing worker
A manufacturing job that performs a series of processes from steel pipe raw material preparation to rolling, forming, cutting, finishing, and inspection through machine operation and quality control.
Steel Pipe Manufacturing Equipment Operator
A job that operates equipment handling processes such as forming, welding, and cutting on steel pipe production lines to maintain quality and production efficiency.
Weighing Instrument Assembler
Manufacturing position responsible for assembling parts, fine-tuning, inspecting, and calibrating weighing instruments such as scales.
Industrial Instrument Maintenance Inspector
A technical job that inspects, calibrates, and repairs measuring instruments (such as pressure gauges, thermometers, flow meters, etc.) in factories and plants to support normal operations.
Air Navigation Maintenance Engineer
Specialized professionals who perform regular inspections, maintenance, repairs of aircraft, and checks before and after operations to support safe flights.
Aircraft Maintenance Technician
A profession that inspects, maintains, and repairs aircraft to support safe flight operations.
Aviation Instrument Manufacturing Engineer (Excluding Production Engineers)
Technical job responsible for parts processing to assembly, adjustment, and quality inspection of various instruments installed on aircraft.
Aircraft Factory Maintenance Technician
A technical job in aircraft manufacturing lines or factories that involves assembling, disassembling, inspecting, repairing, and adjusting parts to support safe flight.