High Concentration × Weaknesses: Numerical & Quantitative Analysis

Jobs Utilizing Other Abilities with Less Numerical Work

This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work utilizing language and interpersonal skills rather than working with numbers.

The need for mathematical thinking varies by occupation. Many jobs value other abilities - language skills, interpersonal abilities, sensitivity, creativity - more than numbers and calculations. Additionally, in some fields, qualitative judgment and understanding of human relationships are the most valuable assets.

What matters is finding an environment where you can utilize your strengths. Various abilities beyond numbers also hold important value in society. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such diverse strengths.

1046 jobs found.

Finishing Worker (Casting Manufacturing)

A job that removes burrs and gates from metal products after casting to ensure specified dimensions and surface quality.

Combed Cotton (Combed Cotton) Machine Operator

A manufacturing job that feeds raw cotton into a combing machine, performs fiber sorting, uniformization, and impurity removal, and produces sheet-like cotton fibers (combed cotton).

Bag Maker (Cloth Products)

Occupation of manufacturing cloth bags. Responsible for each process from cutting cloth to sewing with sewing machines, inspection, and finishing.

Charcoal Wood Splitting Worker

Occupation that splits and prepares raw wood material for charcoal production using a hand axe or wedges, processing it into shapes suitable for carbonization.

Chopstick Maker (Wooden)

A profession that manufactures chopsticks using wood as raw material. Involves a series of processes from shaving wood using machines or by hand, to polishing, painting, inspection, and packaging.

Electrostatic Painter

Electrostatic painters use static electricity to uniformly adhere powder paint to workpieces and cure and finish it through baking in a manufacturing role.

Plate-Making Photo Retoucher

A specialist occupation in the printing process that corrects and retouches photo originals for plate-making to ensure print quality.

Plate Burning Worker

A job that manufactures plates for printing by burning and developing them for use in the printing process.

Flour Milling Sieve (Sieve) Sifting Worker

A profession that performs operations to sort powder by particle size using sifting machines in the flour milling process and manage quality.

Bookbinding Inspector

A profession that visually inspects books and booklets after the bookbinding process, checks page order, binding strength, printing quality, etc., and sorts out defective products.