In-House Work × Weaknesses: Physical Stamina & Endurance
Jobs Focusing on Intellectual Work with Less Physical Tasks
This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer intellectual work or desk jobs rather than physical tasks.
The need for physical stamina varies greatly by occupation. Some jobs require intellectual activities and mental concentration rather than physical demands. Additionally, many occupations center on desk work and quiet environments.
What matters is finding ways of working that match your physical condition and stamina. The ability to concentrate on intellectual activities is also an important strength. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such mental labor.
8 jobs found.
Aircraft Lofting Worker
Technical job that creates and revises manufacturing drawings for aircraft parts and structures using CAD, etc., and provides them to the production site.
Sequence Control Engineer (Elevator)
Technical position involving the design, development, and testing of sequence control programs for elevators and other lifting equipment.
Adhesive Manufacturing Technician (Excluding Production Technicians)
Chemical technician responsible for raw material blending to testing evaluation and product commercialization of adhesives.
Electrical Circuit Design Engineer
Electrical circuit design engineers are technical professionals who design and analyze analog and digital circuits using electronic components, responsible for the entire process from prototyping to evaluation and transition to mass production.
Electric Welding Machine Manufacturing Engineer (excluding production engineers)
Technical position responsible for design, development, testing and evaluation, and quality control of electric welding machines.
Delivery Management Clerk
An office job at logistics bases or companies that handles delivery arrangements and management, voucher processing, inventory data updates, etc.
Parts Management Clerk
An administrative position that manages the receipt and shipment of parts used in manufacturing sites and their inventory to support appropriate parts supply. Responsible for ordering, recording incoming and outgoing shipments, inventory counts, etc.
Model Maker
A profession that produces plastic models, industrial prototype models, etc., based on blueprints, prototypes, or 3D data, handling everything from material selection to cutting, polishing, assembly, painting, and finishing.