Curious and inquisitive × 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.

421 jobs found.

Literary Writer

A profession that creates literary works such as novels, poems, and essays, and delivers them to readers through publication and presentation.

Literary Critic

A profession that reads literary works from a professional perspective and conducts criticism and analysis.

Literary Desk Reporter

A profession that involves reporting and writing articles for the literary sections of newspapers and magazines.

Pet Food Development Engineer

A technical position that considers pets' health and preferences, handling raw material selection, nutritional formulation, prototyping, and quality evaluation.

Transformer Development Engineer (Excluding Design)

A technical role that develops high-efficiency, high-withstand-voltage transformers through prototype manufacturing, performance evaluation, and reliability testing.

Editor-in-Chief (Newspaper Company)

Oversees the newspaper company's editorial bureau, determines editorial policies, plans articles, manages departments, and more as a managerial position.

Radiation Utilization Equipment Manufacturing Technician

Technical job involving design, manufacturing, assembly, testing, and quality control of various devices utilizing radiation. Responsible for productization processes of medical, industrial, and research equipment.

Spinning Development Engineer

A technical position that researches and develops spinning machines and raw yarn characteristics to build efficient and high-quality yarn production processes.

Gem Appraiser (Excluding Pawnshops)

Profession that evaluates and determines the quality and authenticity of gems using specialized techniques and equipment.

Spinning Machine Development Engineer (Excluding Design)

Technical position responsible for performance evaluation, improvement, testing, and prototype production of spinning machines that turn cotton or synthetic fibers into yarn.