Strong sense of responsibility × Weaknesses: Physical Stamina & Endurance
Jobs Focusing on Intellectual Work with Less Physical Tasks
This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer intellectual work or desk jobs rather than physical tasks.
The need for physical stamina varies greatly by occupation. Some jobs require intellectual activities and mental concentration rather than physical demands. Additionally, many occupations center on desk work and quiet environments.
What matters is finding ways of working that match your physical condition and stamina. The ability to concentrate on intellectual activities is also an important strength. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such mental labor.
870 jobs found.
Secretary
A profession that assists executives and officers with their duties, handling a wide range of clerical tasks such as document creation, schedule management, and visitor handling.
Department Store Purchasing Clerk
Clerical position in department stores responsible for selecting products for sale, purchasing, and inventory management.
Hospital Receptionist
Hospital receptionists handle general reception duties at hospitals, including verifying health insurance cards, guiding patients with questionnaires, managing appointments, and entering billing information when patients arrive.
Beauty salon owner (with employees)
Beauty salon owners (with employees) operate and manage hair salons, working to improve store sales, staff management, and customer satisfaction.
Anchorage (Byō) Planning Clerk
Clerical position responsible for selecting and planning anchorages within ports to safely and efficiently moor ships.
Building lessor
A profession that owns buildings and handles rental operations to tenants, income and expense management, and planning and supervision of maintenance.
Quality Control Engineer (Metal Tube)
A technical role responsible for quality control and inspection in the metal tube manufacturing process, aimed at suppressing defective products and maintaining product quality.
Quality Control Clerk
A job that administratively supports quality control activities in manufacturing sites, handling data aggregation and analysis, report creation, document management, and various audit responses.
Quality Inspection Technician (Electronic Device Components)
Specialized technical job that inspects the quality of electronic device components, detects defective products, analyzes them, and reports.
Quality Assurance Clerk
A clerical role that collects and analyzes quality data, manages documents, handles audit responses, and follows up on corrective actions to ensure product and service quality.