High safety awareness × Strengths: Attention to Detail & Accuracy

For Those Strong in Attention to Detail & Accuracy

This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable paying attention to details and working accurately.

Situations requiring accuracy exist in many jobs, but their degree and nature vary. Some situations demand numerical accuracy, while others require precision in language or movement. While pursuing perfection is important, discerning the appropriate level of accuracy for each situation is also a valuable skill.

The jobs introduced here tend to offer more opportunities to utilize attention to detail and accuracy. Explore where your thoroughness can create value.

603 jobs found.

Ceramic and Stone Product Production Equipment Operator

A job that operates and monitors equipment from raw material mixing to forming, drying, and firing on manufacturing lines for ceramics and stone products, ensuring quality and safety.

Welding Technician (Excluding Development Engineers)

A technical job that joins metal materials using various welding methods for manufacturing and repairing machine parts and structures. Also handles quality control and safety management.

Welder (PVC Processing)

This occupation involves welding the joints of PVC products to integrate seams in pipes, sheets, etc., ensuring airtightness and watertightness.

Melting Worker (Non-Ferrous Metal Smelting)

A manufacturing job that melts and refines non-ferrous metals, achieving the specified metal composition through temperature control and impurity removal.

Hot-Dip Plating Worker

Manufacturing technician who immerses parts in a bath of molten metal to adhere plating to the metal surface.

Lacquer manufacturing worker

A job that compounds lacquer (organic solvent-based paint) from raw materials, manufactures it as a product, and performs quality management.

Rack Master Operator

Specialized warehouse worker who uses the operation panel of an automated warehouse system (Rack Master) to manage loading/unloading and control equipment.

Land cargo handling and transportation workers

A job that uses forklifts, cranes, carts, etc., at warehouses and logistics bases to handle, transport, stack, and load/unload cargo.

Shore Power Operator (Shipyard)

A job in shipyards that supplies onshore power (shore power) to ships, handling switchboard operations and cable connections.

Potassium Sulfide Manufacturing Worker

Industrial production worker who manufactures potassium sulfide through chemical reactions and process management.