Factory Work × Career Path: Production Management
628 jobs found.
Sugar Crystallization Worker
Occupation that refines sugar liquor extracted from sugarcane or sugar beets, crystallizes it, and manufactures sugar. Responsible for processes such as decolorization, concentration, crystallization, centrifugal separation, and drying.
Paper Box Maker (Paper Container Manufacturing)
This occupation manufactures paper containers such as paper boxes and cardboard, performing a series of processes including cutting raw paper, folding, gluing, etc., through machine operations and manual labor, while handling quality control.
Hair Styling Product Manufacturing Worker
This occupation handles the manufacturing processes from blending raw materials for hair styling products (such as hair wax and pomade) to mixing, filling, and packaging.
Copper Plate Washing Worker (Copper Rolling Industry)
Occupation that cleans, degreases, and polishes the surfaces of metal sheets (such as copper plates) produced in the copper rolling industry using chemicals, water, and polishing machines to improve quality.
Plate-Making Worker
Specialized profession that creates, outputs, and performs quality inspections on printing plates (layouts) for printed materials.
Product Packaging Worker
Product packaging workers package finished products in factories or warehouses and prepare them for shipment. They handle selection of packaging materials, operation of packaging machines, manual packing, label application, sealing, inspection, etc.
Flour Milling Raw Material Worker
Flour milling raw material workers receive and inspect grains such as wheat, perform raw material adjustments including foreign matter removal, sorting, weighing, and mixing, and prepare them in a state suitable for the flour milling process.
Flour Milling Equipment Operator
An occupation that operates and monitors flour milling equipment using grains such as wheat as raw materials to produce high-quality powdery products.
Spinning Worker
An occupation that cleans and aligns raw fibers such as wool and manufactures pre-spinning raw materials called tops and rovings.
Bookbinding Inspector
A profession that visually inspects books and booklets after the bookbinding process, checks page order, binding strength, printing quality, etc., and sorts out defective products.