Shifts × Weaknesses: Analytical & Logical Thinking

Jobs with Less Emphasis on Analytical & Logical Thinking

This collection features jobs that may suit those who prefer to work using intuition and experience rather than logical analysis.

While analytical skills and logical thinking are needed in many jobs, their importance and required form vary significantly by occupation. Some jobs value field experience and intuitive judgment more than detailed data analysis. Additionally, in some fields, sensitivity and understanding of human relationships are prioritized over logic.

What matters is finding an environment where you can utilize your strengths. Not being analytical isn't a weakness - it means you perceive things differently and can create value in other ways. The jobs introduced here offer possibilities to leverage such diverse strengths.

33 jobs found.

Rickshaw Puller (Tourist Use)

Pulls a rickshaw by hand while guiding tourists on history and landmarks en route to their destination.

Supermarket Staff

Supermarket staff work in retail stores selling food and daily necessities, handling overall store operations such as product display, cash register duties, customer service, and inventory management.

Sports Club Receptionist

Sports club receptionists are front desk staff who handle reception duties for members and visitors using the facility, membership procedures, fee settlements, facility guidance, reservation management, phone handling, and more.

Leather Skiving Worker

One of the leather manufacturing processes, a specialist occupation that skives the back surface of leather to make the thickness uniform.

Leather Finishing Worker

A craftsman who performs finishing processes such as dyeing, coating, and polishing on leather materials like cowhide or synthetic leather to shape the appearance and functionality of products.

Warehouse worker

A frontline job responsible for inbound and outbound handling of goods and parts in warehouses, picking, packing, inventory management, etc.

Corrugated Cardboard Packer

A job that involves packing products into cardboard boxes for packaging in warehouses or logistics centers.

Cardboard Box Assembler

Manufacturing work that combines cardboard box parts to assemble them into box shapes.

Cook (In-flight meal production)

A profession in airline or catering company kitchens mass-producing in-flight meals while maintaining quality and hygiene.

Boxwood seal material maker

Manufacturing occupation using boxwood material as the main raw material to cut, dry, polish, and finish wooden blocks for seal materials.