Logistics Coordinator (Part-Time)
Brink’s Inc is hiring a part-time Logistics Coordinator to join their team in Singapore. The role involves managing cash transactions, operating forklifts and stackers, and maintaining accurate inventory records. Candidates must possess a Nitec or Diploma in Logistics, a valid forklift license, and basic PC proficiency. The position requires manual handling and physical fitness to perform loading and unloading duties effectively.
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Experience
Experience not specified
Function
Operations
Work mode
Onsite, Singapore
Company
Tier 2
What you will work on
Brink’s Inc is hiring a part-time Logistics Coordinator to join their team in Singapore. The role involves managing cash transactions, operating forklifts and stackers, and maintaining accurate inventory records. Candidates must possess a Nitec or Diploma in Logistics, a valid forklift license, and basic PC proficiency. The position requires manual handling and physical fitness to perform loading and unloading duties effectively.
TAL's take
Stable global company, but the role is an entry-level operational position with standard manual labor requirements.
The JD is clear, coherent, and outlines specific operational tasks and physical requirements.
Must haves
- Nitec or Diploma in Logistics or related field
- Valid forklift license
- Experience with stackers
- Basic PC skills
- Physically fit and able to handle manual tasks
Tools and skills
About the company
Brink's is an established global provider of secure logistics and cash management services.
Posts mentioning Brink’s Inc
My co-founder is a genius coder and that's the fkn problem
I'm 23M. My friend, same age as me, is literally one of the most brilliant programmers I know - built his first app at 15 and won every hackathon in college. We started a SaaS startup 6 months ago that helps small businesses automate their inventory. Got a 500k seed round cause investors loved his tech demo. But I'm losing my fucking mind dealing with him. He codes like a genius when he wants to, but that's the problem - when he wants to. Won't show up till 2pm cause "he codes better at night". Won't push updates for weeks then drops massive changes at 3am that break everything. Our beta users are pissed cause features they need are sitting in his "almost done" list for months while he builds random shit that excites him. I handle everything else - customer support, investor updates, sales calls, documentation, bug reports, and he still has the nerve to say I don't understand tech enough. His new gaming friends are over at our office all the time for "LAN parties" that last till morning while I'm trying to run a fucking company. Don't get me wrong - when he actually sits down to code, he's incredible. Built our core product in 2 weeks. But now he's more interested in playing League of Legends and watching coding livestreams than fixing critical bugs. Says "real startups don't have fixed hours" whenever I bring it up. I really need advice. We have a product that could be huge, users who actually want to pay us, but I'm watching it all slip away cause my co-founder would rather speedrun Elden Ring than talk to customers. I don't wanna lose a friend but my mental health is fucked from carrying this whole thing alone.
Why nation fall
What is an extractive economy? An extractive economy is one where a small elite holds all the power political and economic and uses it to serve themselves. These people don’t build, they extract. Resources, labor, wealth, and even hope from the masses. The rest of the population gets scraps, if anything. The institutions are built not to include, but to exclude. Over time, this creates deep poverty, stagnation, and chaos. It suppresses talent, kills opportunity, and chokes any chance of a better future for the majority. And here’s where it gets darker. In extractive regimes, when governments fail to provide the basics like employment, clean water, good education, accessible healthcare then they don’t admit failure. They don’t reflect. Instead, they often manufacture or magnify external threats. It becomes their distraction weapon. Because when a nation is “on the brink of war,” suddenly your unemployment doesn’t feel that important. Your hunger, your lack of income, your unfulfilled dreams they all shrink in comparison to the idea that “our very nation is under threat.” It works like magic. And I’ve started noticing a pattern in our country. September 18, 2016 – Uri Attack Terrorists entered an Indian army camp and carried out a brutal attack. No one ever figured out how they got in, how they planned it, how it slipped through intelligence cracks. But right after that came the surgical strike, publicized to the point where it felt like Modi ji himself had led the team across the border. Six months later, UP elections happened. The BJP won with overwhelming support. The narrative was simple: “Yeh naya Hindustan hai, ghar mein ghus ke maarta hai.” “Modi hai toh mumkin hai.” ⸻ February 14, 2019 – Pulwama Attack 250 kg of RDX entered Indian soil. How? Nobody knows. A civilian car got near a military convoy and exploded. Again—no clear answers. But soon after came the Balakot air strike. Patriotism peaked. The government took center stage, framing the military operation as its own victory. May 2019 – General Elections. Guess what? BJP swept again. Why? Because Modi had “done the airstrike,” and Abhinandan was brought back like a national trophy. ⸻ March 2020 – COVID Crisis The country was bleeding. People dying in corridors. No hospital beds. No oxygen. Crematoriums overloaded. But the headlines? Sushant Singh Rajput’s suicide. Suddenly, we were all CBI agents. Rhea Chakraborty became the national villain. Weeks passed. Anger diverted. Public pain diluted. Final verdict? Who knows. But the damage was done—distraction achieved. ⸻ June 2020 – Galwan Valley Clash COVID deaths were rising. The system was crumbling. But suddenly, China was at the gates. Instead of focusing on saving lives, we were busy banning TikTok. Talking about boycotting Chinese goods. And just when everything felt like it was falling apart… Rafale jets arrived. News channels ran 24/7 coverage of fighter jets like they were Avengers joining the battlefield. Meanwhile, people were still dying without oxygen in hospitals. ⸻ Now again, another terrorist incident. Possibly a post-raid misreported as a terror attack. But the media is spinning it hard. Visuals. Footage. Narratives. Almost as if the intent is not to inform, but to influence. ⸻ Ram Mandir Timing The Ram Mandir verdict, unresolved for 30 years, suddenly got closure just before the 2024 elections. Fine. But what I can’t understand is why the inauguration happened before the temple was even completed. Shankaracharyas themselves said it’s inauspicious to do that. But it happened anyway. Just in time to stoke emotions ahead of the vote. ⸻ I’m not claiming anything. I’m not saying it’s all orchestrated. I don’t have the proof. But I see the pattern. Again and again. National tragedies turned into nationalist campaigns. Failures turned into war cries. Real questions silenced under the weight of “enemy threats.” Why is it that every time we’re close to an election, a tragedy happens, followed by a military response, and then a victory lap? I don’t know the answer. I’m just a guy observing. But I can’t unsee it now.
Why are there not enough folks having entrepreneurial aspirations?
I am addressing folks who have progressed in their careers enough to earn at least 30 LPA. If you are earning this much in India, you are already in the creamy layer of lifestyle. You can afford a decent house, a decent car and probably save up some assets for children's education (A lot of people bring up the expensive school fees). If you get a salary hike from 30LPA to 40LPA, there is a high chance that your lifestyle will not change that much. Your savings will go up, but still it will take years to retire early in either case. It's quite apparent that if you want to improve your lifestyle at this stage (highest-end middle class), you will require an income source capable of providing leverage and exponential growth. Barring a few folks I know, everyone else is busy grinding leetcode, mugging up system design for their next job switch or even worse, kissing ass for the next promotion. Why don't enough people start learning about business on the side and slowly start investing their free time in learning everything they can about it ? I am sure it will be a much better time investment if you play your cards correctly for a long enough time (I am pretty sure this is still a quicker path to riches as compared to 30 years of SIP investments). Note: I completely understand that many people have monthly payment obligations like EMIs. And that's why my question is about 'aspirations'. I am not asking 'Why are people not leaving their jobs to pursue entrepreneurship?'. I am rather asking 'Why are people not even thinking about anything else apart from the next (disappointing) hike?'