Factory work × Weaknesses: Initiative & Leadership

Jobs Excelling in Support Roles Rather Than Leadership

This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to fulfill assigned roles reliably rather than leadership.

The need for initiative varies by occupation. Some jobs require reliably executing tasks under clear instructions rather than constantly making decisions and leading. Additionally, in many situations, supporting organizations and teams in a support role is an important value.

What matters is finding an environment where you can contribute to your maximum in your role. The ability to support and execute are also indispensable organizational strengths. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such reliability and support capabilities.

182 jobs found.

Raw rubber refining worker

This occupation involves processing raw rubber with kneaders, adjusting formulations, temperature, and pressure to manufacture uniform rubber base materials.

Weighing Instrument Assembler

Manufacturing position responsible for assembling parts, fine-tuning, inspecting, and calibrating weighing instruments such as scales.

Aircraft Tube Manufacturing Worker (Rubber-made)

A manufacturing job responsible for molding, vulcanization to inspection of rubber-made tubes used in aircraft.

Synthetic Sake Manufacturing Worker

A manufacturing technician who handles everything from blending and mixing raw materials for synthetic sake to operating manufacturing equipment, quality inspection, hygiene management, record-keeping, and reporting.

Graphite Round Rod Forming Worker

Manufacturing operator who mixes graphite powder with binder, forms into round rods, dries, and sinters. Produces parts used in electrodes, heat exchanger components, etc.

Solid Fat Worker (Oil and Fat Processing)

This occupation involves manufacturing solid fat products such as margarine and shortening through processes like deodorization, decolorization, winter fractionation, and partial hydrogenation applied to edible oils and fats.

Waste Paper Sorting Worker (Paper Manufacturing)

This occupation involves sorting collected waste paper by removing foreign objects and classifying it by size and type to make it usable as raw material.

Rubber Footwear Inspector

A job that checks the quality of rubber footwear produced on the manufacturing line through visual inspections, dimensions, functional tests, etc.

Search Coil Manufacturing Worker

Manufacturing technician who winds, assembles, and inspects search coils used in metal detectors, magnetic sensors, etc., according to the specified specifications.

Side Mirror Assembler

A manufacturing job that precisely assembles automobile side mirrors on an assembly line and performs operation inspections and quality checks.