Barbers:
Provide services like cutting, shampooing, or styling hair, or shaving.
Child, Family, and School Social Workers:
Provide social services to children and families to help children function better in school.
Massage Therapists:
Treat patients by using touch to manipulate soft-tissue muscles.
Mental Health Counselors:
Work with individuals to prevent mental health problems and improve their mental health.
Childcare Workers:
Take care of children in daycare settings.
Clergy:
Provide spiritual guidance and lead religious services.
Mental Health and Substance Abuse Social Workers:
Assess and treat people who struggle with addiction to substances such as alcohol, tobacco, or other drugs.
Morticians, Undertakers, and Funeral Directors:
Manage and oversee funeral services.
Clinical, Counseling, and School Psychologists:
Treat emotional and mental problems of children, families, or other groups.
Community Health Workers:
Help individuals and communities adopt healthier behaviors.
Nannies:
Nannies care for children in private households and provide support and expertise to parents in satisfying children's physical, emotional, intellectual, and social needs.
Neuropsychologists:
Diagnose and treat brain and mental health disorders.
Credit Counselors:
Advise people and organizations about money.
Embalmers:
Prepare bodies for burial.
Personal Care Aides:
Help patients with daily living activities in homes or care facilities.
Rehabilitation Counselors:
Work with people to help them become more independent and employable.
Fitness Trainers and Aerobics Instructors:
Instruct or coach people in exercise activities.
Funeral Attendants:
Perform a variety of tasks during a funeral, such as arranging flowers, moving the casket, or helping mourners.
Religious Activities Directors:
Plan, direct, or coordinate religious programs or activities.
Residential Advisors:
Coordinate activities in resident facilities, such as college dorms or group homes.
Funeral Service Managers:
Coordinate or direct the activities of funeral homes.
Hairdressers and Cosmetologists:
Cut, color, and style customers' hair or apply make-up.
Shampooers:
Shampoo and rinse customers' hair.
Skincare Specialists:
Provide skincare treatments to face and body to enhance a customers' appearance.
Health Care Social Workers:
Provide psychosocial support to people who are dealing with serious illnesses.
Health Educators:
Teach people about behaviors that promote health and wellness.
Social and Community Service Managers:
Plan, direct, and coordinate activities for social service programs.
Social and Human Service Assistants:
Help people get through difficult times or get extra support.
Industrial-Organizational Psychologists:
Use principles of psychology to study problems that happen in organizations.
Laundry and Dry-Cleaning Workers:
Operate washing or dry-cleaning machines to clean clothes or household articles, such as drapes or rugs.
Substance Abuse and Behavioral Disorder Counselors:
Work one-on-one or with groups to help people with drug, alcohol, and other problems.
Supervisors of Personal Service Workers:
Supervise personal service workers, such as flight attendants, hairdressers, or caddies.
Locker Room, Coatroom, and Dressing Room Attendants:
Provide personal items to customers in locker rooms or dressing rooms.
Manicurists and Pedicurists:
Clean, shape, and paint fingernails and toenails.
Tailors and Dressmakers:
Design, make, or fit clothing.
Textile and Garment Pressers:
Iron or shape clothing or other materials by hand or machine.
Marriage and Family Therapists:
Help to treat or solve problems within marriages or families.