Soil Management × Strengths: Planning & Organization

For Those Strong in Planning & Organization

This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable proceeding with things in a planned manner and managing them in an organized way.

Planning and organizing methods vary from person to person. Some create detailed schedules, while others set broad directions. Some utilize digital tools, while others manage with paper notebooks. What matters is being able to move things forward using methods that work for you.

The jobs introduced here tend to offer more opportunities to utilize planning and organizational skills. Find a place where you can apply your management style.

12 jobs found.

Farm Management Advisor

Farm management advisors provide advice and guidance on farming techniques to farmers, supporting improvements in productivity and quality as a professional role.

Fruit Tree Cultivation Instructor

Fruit tree cultivation instructors provide guidance and advice on cultivation techniques and business improvement to fruit tree farmers and producers, aiming to enhance quality and optimize production efficiency as specialists.

Chestnut Cultivator

A profession that handles everything from chestnut tree cultivation management to harvesting, drying, sorting, and shipping preparation.

Konnyaku Yam Cultivator

Agricultural worker specialized in konnyaku yam cultivation, responsible from soil improvement to harvesting and shipping.

Sugarcane (Kibi) Cultivator

Specialized profession that cultivates sugarcane, the raw material for sugar and bioethanol, in tropical and subtropical regions to improve production efficiency.

Botanical Garden Manager (Private)

A managerial position in a private botanical garden that oversees plant cultivation and maintenance, exhibition planning, revenue management, and visitor services.

Tobacco Cultivation Technical Instructor

Tobacco Cultivation Technical Instructors provide specialized guidance and advice to farmers and cultivation cooperatives on cultivation techniques such as soil management, seedling raising, pest and disease control, harvesting and drying technologies to improve tobacco quality and yield. They work at national or prefectural extension service institutions and also support variety selection and the introduction of new technologies.

Farm Manager

A managerial position overseeing everything from cultivation to harvesting, quality control, and staff management at production sites such as orchards and vegetable farms.

Crop Fertilization Manager

A specialist who conducts soil analysis, fertilizer application planning, and environmental management for crops such as vegetables and fruit trees to optimize growth and improve quality.

Hay Grower (Non-Livestock)

Agricultural worker who does not engage in livestock farming, handling seeding to harvesting, drying, and packaging of hay for feed.