Meticulous × Weaknesses: Learning Agility & Knowledge Acquisition
Jobs Utilizing Existing Skills Rather Than Acquiring New Knowledge
This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work utilizing existing skills and experience rather than acquiring new knowledge.
The need for continuous learning varies by occupation. Some jobs value deepening and refining specialized expertise once acquired rather than constantly learning new things. Additionally, some fields value years of experience above all else, and some environments allow you to thrive with a stable skill set.
What matters is finding an environment where you can utilize your experience and skills. Deepening what you already have is also a respectable career. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such accumulated experience.
141 jobs found.
Suihi (Water Elutriation) Worker (Ceramics Manufacturing)
This occupation involves mixing clay, the raw material for ceramics, with water, adjusting particle size and removing impurities to prepare slurry suitable for the pottery production process.
Supermarket Inspection and Acceptance Worker
This occupation involves checking the quality and quantity of goods delivered to the supermarket's backroom, recording them, and reporting.
Stacker Worker (Printing Industry)
Occupation involving tasks such as removing printed sheets from the machine in the printing process and stacking them in specified quantities.
Sand Spraying Worker (Abrasive Cloth Manufacturing)
Manufacturing job that applies resin-based adhesive to the base fabric of abrasive cloth (sandpaper), sprays abrasive grains onto it, and dries and fixes them.
Maintenance Worker (Railway Vehicle Cleaning)
This job involves cleaning the interior and exterior of railway vehicles, replenishing supplies, and performing simple inspections to maintain an environment where passengers can travel comfortably and safely.
Product Sorting Worker
Operators who sort and classify products or goods by visual inspection or simple tests according to their quality or type, and prepare for the next process or shipment.
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.
Lime Sorting Worker
Workers who visually or mechanically sort and classify limestone blocks, the raw material for lime, by size and quality to provide materials suitable for the manufacturing process.
Cement Worker (Cement Product Manufacturing)
This occupation involves handling the entire process from mixing raw materials for cement products to forming and hardening, as well as operating manufacturing equipment, quality control, and safety and health management.
Ore Washer
A worker who washes and sorts ore mined from mines using water or chemicals to recover valuable mineral resources.