Quality Inspection × Career Path: Production Management Staff
58 jobs found.
Hanafuda Card Maker
Specialized occupation responsible for the manufacturing processes from design, printing, processing, and finishing of traditional Japanese-patterned playing cards "Hanafuda."
Laminator Operator (Corrugated Board Manufacturing)
This occupation involves operating a laminating machine for corrugated board to glue and join corrugated board sheets together, manufacturing base materials for corrugated boxes.
Beef Curry Canned Food Manufacturing Worker
Beef curry canned food manufacturing workers handle the entire process from raw material blending to filling cans, heat sterilization, and packaging.
Rock Sugar Manufacturing Worker
A manufacturing job that dissolves and crystallizes sugar to produce rock sugar and handles quality control.
Bleaching Finisher (Spinning, Weaving Manufacturing)
Worker who performs bleaching treatment, washing, and finishing processes on fabrics or yarns using chemicals.
Bottled Food Manufacturing Equipment Operator
This occupation involves operating a series of equipment from filling to sterilization and labeling on the bottled food manufacturing line, maintaining quality and safety.
Plastic Doll Assembler
A manufacturing job that removes plastic doll parts from injection molding machines, assembles them using adhesion, screws, etc., and performs inspection and packaging.
Flexible Container Bag Manufacturing Worker (Chemical Fiber)
This occupation uses chemical fiber materials such as polypropylene to manufacture flexible container bags (FIBC) through mechanical processing, sewing, and welding. It produces bags for transporting and storing large volumes of powdered or granular materials.
Crushing and Sieving Operator (Chemical Product Manufacturing)
This occupation is responsible for crushing raw materials for chemical products and adjusting particle size using sieves.
Spinning Finisher
Spinning finishers are manufacturing workers who process raw yarn produced in the spinning process through finishing steps to achieve shippable quality. They ensure the performance and uniformity of the yarn through heat treatment, twisting, winding, and inspection.