Cautious × Weaknesses: Physical Stamina & Endurance
Jobs Focusing on Intellectual Work with Less Physical Tasks
This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer intellectual work or desk jobs rather than physical tasks.
The need for physical stamina varies greatly by occupation. Some jobs require intellectual activities and mental concentration rather than physical demands. Additionally, many occupations center on desk work and quiet environments.
What matters is finding ways of working that match your physical condition and stamina. The ability to concentrate on intellectual activities is also an important strength. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such mental labor.
197 jobs found.
Bond Settlement Clerk
A job in financial institutions or securities companies responsible for clerical processing of bond interest calculations and principal repayments, accurate ledger recording, and balance reconciliation.
Industrial Robot Teaching Engineer
A technical job that designs and registers the movements of industrial robots to achieve automation of production lines.
Advisor (Company: Officer)
An officer position that participates in management in companies with a board of directors under the Companies Act, assisting directors.
Pesticide Residue Analyst
Specialist who quantifies and detects pesticide residues in agricultural products and environmental samples using high-sensitivity analytical instruments, evaluates safety, confirms compliance with legal standards, and contributes to quality assurance.
CTP Operator
Specialist in plate-making who operates Computer-to-Plate (CTP) equipment, outputs and develops printing plates, and performs quality checks.
Materials Receiving Clerk
A job that handles clerical tasks related to receiving and inspecting delivered materials, updating inventory data, and preparing for payment processing.
Drilling Machine Design Engineer
Designs and develops drilling machines, responsible for specification formulation, prototyping, evaluation, and mass production.
System Administrator
A technical role that operates, maintains, and manages corporate servers, networks, and other IT infrastructure, handling incident response, security measures, and performance monitoring.
System Development Engineer (For General-Purpose Computers)
Technical position involving requirements definition, design, implementation, testing, and operation of business systems targeting general-purpose computers (mainframes).
Lab Technician (Chemical Fertilizer Manufacturing)
This occupation involves conducting experiments, analyses, and tests to evaluate the quality and physical properties of raw materials and products for chemical fertilizers, supporting quality control in the manufacturing process.