Good team player × 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.
107 jobs found.
Camera Development Engineer
Camera development engineers are technical professionals who design, develop, and evaluate optical equipment such as camera bodies, interchangeable lenses, and electronic control systems.
Photo Retoucher (Print Photo Correction)
A profession that digitally edits photo images for print materials, performing color adjustments, removal of unwanted objects, compositing, etc.
Internal System Engineer (Primarily Engaged in System Operations)
A technical role that monitors IT infrastructure such as servers, networks, and middleware within a company, and handles incident response and periodic maintenance.
JAVA Application Development Engineer
An engineer who designs, implements, tests, and maintains business applications using the Java platform.
Order Processing Clerk
Responsible for corporate order processing tasks, including order data entry, management, delivery adjustments, and customer correspondence as an administrative role.
Shipping Clerk
Shipping clerks handle clerical tasks such as creating shipping documents, issuing picking instructions, packing, and arranging deliveries when shipping products or goods.
Product Development Staff
A job that analyzes market needs and handles everything from planning new products to development, prototyping, and mass production preparation.
Food Development Engineer
A technical role responsible for planning and developing food products, from prototyping and evaluation to manufacturing process design. Promotes commercialization considering market needs and regulations.
Food Chemistry Researcher
Research position studying the chemical properties of food, involved in new product development and quality/safety evaluations.
Canned Food Development Engineer
Develops, designs, and evaluates canned foods, optimizing safety, quality, flavor, and shelf life as a technical role.