Strong sense of responsibility × Career Path: Manufacturing manager
126 jobs found.
Concrete Pole Manufacturing Worker
An occupation that manufactures concrete poles (utility poles or support poles) inside factories, handling the entire process from mixing, pouring, forming, curing, inspection, to shipping in an integrated manner.
Contact lens inspector
Specialized profession that inspects the physical and optical properties of contact lenses using optical measurement devices on manufacturing lines or in inspection labs to ensure quality.
Recycled rubber manufacturing worker
This occupation manufactures recycled rubber through processes such as crushing, mixing, and vulcanization using waste tires and scrap rubber products as raw materials.
Juice Extractor (Flavored Beverage Manufacturing)
An occupation that uses fruits and vegetables as raw materials, operates juice extraction equipment to produce raw materials for flavored beverages (juice, concentrated fruit juice, etc.). Performs quality control and hygiene management to support stable production.
Magnetic Recording Media Manufacturing Worker
Manufacturing operator who produces magnetic recording media such as hard disks and magnetic tapes.
Vehicle Ironworker
Skilled trade involving processing, assembling, and repairing metal parts for railway vehicles and special vehicles. Performs welding, cutting, bending processing, and creates high-precision structures based on blueprints.
Filling worker (Pharmaceuticals)
Manufacturing job in a pharmaceutical factory production line, responsible for the filling process of tablets, injections, etc., performing aseptic operations and quality control.
Sintering Worker (Metal Smelting)
Technician who forms and sinters powdered metal materials to manufacture parts with specified shapes and mechanical properties.
Bar steel rolling worker
A profession that heats billets or steel ingots in a reheating furnace and uses a roll mill to manufacture bar steel products such as rod steel and shaped steel.
Jōshinko Manufacturing Worker
Jōshinko manufacturing workers are operators who mass-produce jōshinko through processes such as washing rice, steaming, drying, grinding, and sieving.