Patient × 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.

5993 jobs found.

Advertising Art Worker

Advertising Art Workers are artisans who create and decorate letters and designs used in commercial advertising items such as signboards and displays using techniques like hand-drawing, airbrush, spray painting, and cutting sheets.

Advertising Slot Procurement Salesperson

Sales role that negotiates and purchases advertising spaces and airtime from media companies to secure them.

Armor Craftsman

Armor craftsmen are artisans who use non-metal materials such as leather, cloth, and wood to produce decorative parts for armor and armor suits.

Slag Processing Worker

A manufacturing technical job that crushes, sorts, and washes slag generated at steel mills or non-ferrous metal manufacturing plants and processes it into shapes suitable for reuse.

Steel Materials Design Engineer

An engineer who designs the chemical composition and heat treatment conditions of steel materials and conducts materials development and evaluation to meet the required mechanical properties.

Machine Tool Design Engineer

Technical role responsible for designing the structures and mechanisms of machine tools, creating drawings, and performing analyses for manufacturing and processing.

Wooden Pattern Maker (Metal Machine Tools)

A profession that uses wood or plywood to process and finish wooden patterns (patterns) for metal casting with metalworking machines.

Mining Machinery Development Engineer (Excluding Design)

Technical role involving prototyping, testing, evaluation, and maintenance improvement of excavation and transportation machinery used in mines. Does not include design work; responsible for field testing, performance improvement, and safety enhancement.

Mine Locomotive Engineer

A specialist profession that drives locomotives traveling on tracks inside mines to efficiently and safely transport ore and materials.

Mining Researcher

A research position that contributes to sustainable resource use and environmental conservation through the discovery, evaluation of mining resources, and development of mining technologies via geological surveys and experimental analysis.