High Concentration × Strengths: Adaptability
For Those with High Adaptability
This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable responding to changes in environment and situation.
Adaptability manifests in diverse ways. Some respond quickly while enjoying change, while others respond steadily while carefully assessing situations. Some excel at jumping into new environments, while others are skilled at flexibly responding to changes within existing environments.
The jobs introduced here tend to involve frequent changes or require flexible responses. Explore where you can utilize your adaptability.
39 jobs found.
Professional Boxer
A sports athlete who participates in professional boxing matches and aims for victory.
Hair and Makeup Artist
A professional who provides total beauty by combining hair and makeup to create the customer's image.
Bent Wood Manufacturing Worker
Occupation of selecting timber with irregular shapes such as natural bends or knots (burls) and processing it into products like decorations or furniture parts.
Body Assembler (Automobile Manufacturing)
A manufacturing job that assembles automobile body (body) parts using jigs and fixtures, and performs welding and fastening work.
Motor Grader Operator
A profession that operates motor graders to perform grading, slope adjustment, etc., on roads and development sites.
Street Food Vendor
A profession that involves cooking, selling, and customer service using street stalls or mobile sales vehicles to provide food and drinks to customers.
Melting Operator (Glass Fiber Manufacturing)
This occupation handles the industrial process of melting raw materials for glass fiber at high temperatures and producing molten glass while maintaining quality.
Racing Driver
A profession that operates dedicated racing cars at high speeds and safely, competing for times or positions in circuit or public road races.
Furnace Operator (Non-Ferrous Metal Smelting)
A technical job that operates smelting furnaces for non-ferrous metals, handling everything from raw material charging to melting, refining, and molten metal extraction.