Quality Inspection × Weaknesses: Analytical & Logical Thinking

Jobs with Less Emphasis on Analytical & Logical Thinking

This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work using intuition and experience rather than logical analysis.

While analytical skills and logical thinking are needed in many jobs, their importance and required form vary significantly by occupation. Some jobs value field experience and intuitive judgment more than detailed data analysis. Additionally, in some fields, sensitivity and understanding of human relationships are prioritized over logic.

What matters is finding an environment where you can utilize your strengths. Not being analytical isn't a weakness - it means you perceive things differently and can create value in other ways. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such diverse strengths.

193 jobs found.

Staple Nail Manufacturing Worker

A technical job that mass-produces staple nails used in office supplies and furniture through high-precision press processing, heat treatment, and surface treatment.

Spike Shoe Manufacturing Worker

A manufacturing job that handles material processing, assembly, and finishing of sports spike shoes.

Splitter Worker (Chip Factory)

Operator on a manufacturing line that splits woody raw materials with machines and processes them into chips.

Sports Bag Manufacturing Worker

A site worker responsible for the manufacturing process of sports bags, handling everything from material cutting to sewing and assembly.

Sun-Dried Fish and Shellfish Manufacturer

Worker who manufactures additive-free sun-dried products by salting fish and shellfish and then drying them in the sun or with a dryer.

Raw Dried Wakasagi Manufacturer

A job that manufactures 'raw dried wakasagi' by salting wakasagi and drying it in the sun or with machines.

Leather Skiving Worker

One of the leather manufacturing processes, a specialist occupation that skives the back surface of leather to make the thickness uniform.

Grain Milling Equipment Operator

Job involving operation, monitoring, and maintenance of grain milling (threshing, sorting, and refining of grains) equipment.

Spinning Worker

An occupation that cleans and aligns raw fibers such as wool and manufactures pre-spinning raw materials called tops and rovings.

Thread Sewing Bookbinder

Specialized occupation that forms the book's text block by sewing signatures (bundles of pages) with thread and completes bookbinding through cover pasting and other processes.