Quality Inspection × Weaknesses: Numerical & Quantitative Analysis
Jobs Utilizing Other Abilities with Less Numerical Work
This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work utilizing language and interpersonal skills rather than working with numbers.
The need for mathematical thinking varies by occupation. Many jobs value other abilities - language skills, interpersonal abilities, sensitivity, creativity - more than numbers and calculations. Additionally, in some fields, qualitative judgment and understanding of human relationships are the most valuable assets.
What matters is finding an environment where you can utilize your strengths. Various abilities beyond numbers also hold important value in society. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such diverse strengths.
865 jobs found.
Bleached Candy Cutting Worker
A profession that cuts and shapes bleached candy made from boiled sugar to a specific thickness and form.
Salad Oil Manufacturing Worker
A profession that manufactures edible oil through processes such as pressing, extraction, refining, and deodorization from raw materials like soybeans and rapeseed.
Silkworm Egg Worker
A specialized profession that quality-controls silkworm eggs (silkworm seeds) and hatches them in an appropriate environment.
Sander Worker
A profession that grinds the surfaces of metal products using a sander (grinding machine) to achieve a smooth finish.
Sander Finisher (Woodwork Polishing)
This occupation involves using sanders to smoothly polish the surfaces in the final finishing process of wood products.
Sandwich Manufacturing Worker (For Sale)
A job that supplies products for sale by performing tasks such as cutting bread, assembling fillings, packaging, and labeling on the sandwich production line.
Sandpaper Maker
A job that applies abrasives and adhesives to sandpaper base materials, dries and processes them, cuts to standard sizes, inspects, and completes the product.
Saury Canning Manufacturing Worker
A food manufacturing job that uses saury as raw material and performs line work from washing, heating, filling, canning processing, sterilization, inspection, to packaging.
Tricycle Manufacturing Worker
Manufacturing worker responsible for producing parts, assembly, painting, and inspection of tricycles.
Finishing Machine Operator (Spinning Industry)
This occupation involves operating finishing machines in the final stage of the spinning process to finish yarn, perform inspections, quality control, and machine maintenance.