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Addressing Misconceptions About QREDIV Certification – A Note from the Founder - Crime - Nairaland 43750

Addressing Misconceptions About QREDIV Certification – A Note from the Founder (7494 Views)

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QREDIV: 5:48pm On May 02
Dear Nairaland Community,

My name is Valery, and I am the founder of QREDIV, a globally-oriented certification body committed to preparing professionals for effective, respectful, and collaborative work in international environments.

Recently, I came across a few threads here on Nairaland mentioning QREDIV in a negative light. While everyone is entitled to their opinion, I believe it’s important to clarify certain points and provide an honest view of what QREDIV stands for, especially for those who may be unfamiliar with our work or have received misinformation.

What is QREDIV?

QREDIV (Quantifiable Emotional Intelligence, Racial & National Diversity, Inclusion, and Validation) offers specialized certification programs that help individuals prepare for employment in international organizations—such as the United Nations, NGOs, multinational companies, and global institutions. Our training focuses on:

* Cross-cultural communication
* Conflict resolution during work hours
* Adherence to professional codes of conduct in diverse teams
* Understanding ethical work practices on a global scale

These are not just theoretical concepts—they are practical skills that international employers deeply value. Many international agencies, including the UN, look for this type of certification when assessing whether a candidate is prepared to function effectively in a multicultural environment.

Why the Misunderstandings?

The internet can be both a powerful and a misleading space. Some of the negative mentions appear to come from a misunderstanding of what QREDIV certification represents or from confusion with other unrelated platforms. Let me be clear: QREDIV is not a scam, nor is it a quick-fix certificate mill. Every certificate issued by us is backed by verified training modules, assessments, and instructor-led learning sessions.

Recognition and Integrity

* QREDIV is recognized by several international development partners.
* We have trained over 3,000 professionals, many of whom are now working in roles across Europe, Africa, and Asia.
* Our team includes experts in HR, international law, conflict mediation, and cross-cultural management.

We are constantly engaging with employers, updating our content, and ensuring that what we teach remains relevant and impactful in today’s global workforce.

Final Word

I invite those who have doubts to reach out directly to our team or even to me personally. We are always open to dialogue, questions, and constructive criticism. We’re here to help Nigerians and professionals across the globe get the skills they need—not just certificates on paper, but tools for meaningful careers.

Let’s keep the conversation respectful, honest, and focused on the truth. Thank you for taking the time to read this. I look forward to continued engagement with the Nairaland community.

Warm regards,
Valery
Founder & CEO, QREDIV
📧 [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])
🌍 [www.qrediv.org](http://www.qrediv.org)

1 Like

geniusokorro(f): 8:30pm On May 02
This QREDIV Certificate looks like a special purpose vehicle, all the information about this were posted in the last one month, all the URLs are hosted on NameCheap Inc and were hosted in the last one month too.

3 Likes

Kunzycool(m): 12:52am On May 03
Yes..
It's a scam. They've a network of email phishing scam that are leading victims to the QREDIV® site. They use UN or FAO and lead victims to pay for the course. This post was made just recently to confuse people. It's all part of the scam.
geniusokorro:
This QREDIV Certificate looks like a special purpose vehicle, all the information about this were posted in the last one month, all the URLs are hosted on NameCheap Inc and were hosted in the last one month too.

3 Likes

Austin2143(m): 10:47am On May 03
how do you know for sure? looks legit to me
Kunzycool(m): 4:29pm On May 03
that just ed yesterday is telling me it looks legit. What sort of intoxicated puffery is this.

I know it's damage control for the scam.

It's a SCAM!!! Simple and short. The United Nations knows nothing about the useless course.
Austin2143:
how do you know for sure? looks legit to me

2 Likes

Kunzycool(m): 4:34pm On May 03
This people just ed new s on Nairaland to mislead people and make their scam courses look legit.
Because Nairaland has good SEO, so it will rank well
The UN will not mail you an appointment form and send you to go and pay for some courses.
An appointment form without job interview.

A WHOLE UN?? 😂

2 Likes

Austin2143(m): 5:08pm On May 03
Kunzycool:
that just ed yesterday is telling me it looks legit. What sort of intoxicated puffery is this.

I know it's damage control for the scam.

It's a SCAM!!! Simple and short. The United Nations knows nothing about the useless course.

Your conclusion is based on shallow signals rather than substance. A domain's hosting provider or age says nothing about the legitimacy of the content it hosts. Many respected startups begin with affordable registrars like NameCheap. The real measure is the quality of the training, transparency of the team, and from those who completed it. Tech-savvy skepticism is useful—but don’t confuse it with evidence.
Austin2143(m): 5:11pm On May 03
Kunzycool:
that just ed yesterday is telling me it looks legit. What sort of intoxicated puffery is this.

I know it's damage control for the scam.

It's a SCAM!!! Simple and short. The United Nations knows nothing about the useless course.

Attacking someone's registration date instead of their argument is classic deflection. Whether an is new or old doesn't determine the truth. What matters is whether QREDIV provides real training, competent instruction, and relevant skills. Instead of shouting “scam,” how about proving that the course doesn’t deliver what it promises? Emotion isn't evidence. Go get a job - you have way too much free time
Austin2143(m): 5:11pm On May 03
Kunzycool:
This people just ed new s on Nairaland to mislead people and make their scam courses look legit.
Because Nairaland has good SEO, so it will rank well
The UN will not mail you an appointment form and send you to go and pay for some courses.
An appointment form without job interview.

A WHOLE UN?? 😂

You’re mixing separate issues into one exaggerated rant. Nobody said the UN hires people directly through paid courses. What’s been said is that having relevant, verifiable training helps you stand out in global job markets—including UN jobs. Also, using SEO is standard practice for every modern organization—Google ranking isn’t a trick, it’s how people find credible services. Again: accusations are easy; proof is harder. You’ve offered none.
Kunzycool(m): 11:42pm On May 03
QREDIV is a SCAM!!! Know this and know peace.



Austin2143:


You’re mixing separate issues into one exaggerated rant. Nobody said the UN hires people directly through paid courses. What’s been said is that having relevant, verifiable training helps you stand out in global job markets—including UN jobs. Also, using SEO is standard practice for every modern organization—Google ranking isn’t a trick, it’s how people find credible services. Again: accusations are easy; proof is harder. You’ve offered none.

1 Like

Kunzycool(m): 11:44pm On May 03
You're scamming people and calling it a startup?
That's wild bro 😅
Austin2143:


Your conclusion is based on shallow signals rather than substance. A domain's hosting provider or age says nothing about the legitimacy of the content it hosts. Many respected startups begin with affordable registrars like NameCheap. The real measure is the quality of the training, transparency of the team, and from those who completed it. Tech-savvy skepticism is useful—but don’t confuse it with evidence.
Kunzycool(m): 11:46pm On May 03
Bro!!!! 😅
You're running an email phishing scam. Like what are you defending?

Stopeet

A lot of people got your UN job appointment blah blah blah.

Austin2143:


Attacking someone's registration date instead of their argument is classic deflection. Whether an is new or old doesn't determine the truth. What matters is whether QREDIV provides real training, competent instruction, and relevant skills. Instead of shouting “scam,” how about proving that the course doesn’t deliver what it promises? Emotion isn't evidence. Go get a job - you have way too much free time
Kunzycool(m): 11:48pm On May 03
I really don't have your time. Na work full my hand, if not....

Austin2143:


You’re mixing separate issues into one exaggerated rant. Nobody said the UN hires people directly through paid courses. What’s been said is that having relevant, verifiable training helps you stand out in global job markets—including UN jobs. Also, using SEO is standard practice for every modern organization—Google ranking isn’t a trick, it’s how people find credible services. Again: accusations are easy; proof is harder. You’ve offered none.
Austin2143(m): 8:15am On May 04
Kunzycool:

QREDIV is a SCAM!!! Know this and know peace.




Repeating “scam” like a mantra doesn’t make it true. Most serious organizations don’t operate in all caps and emojis—they look at credentials, track records, and impact. QREDIV is aligned with competencies that international employers, including the FAO and UN-d agencies, consistently look for. That’s why people take it. If you have actual proof—documents, emails, policy screenshots—post it. Otherwise, you’re just noise.
Austin2143(m): 8:17am On May 04
Kunzycool:
You're scamming people and calling it a startup?
That's wild bro 😅

No one’s “calling a scam a startup.” That’s just your oversimplification. Plenty of globally trusted initiatives started small—including training platforms used by UN volunteers and interns. FAO, for example, encourages intercultural communication readiness and demonstrable ethics training. QREDIV addresses exactly that. If you’ve never been through an international hiring process, it’s okay to it you’re unfamiliar with how these certifications work.
Austin2143(m): 8:18am On May 04
Kunzycool:
Bro!!!! 😅
You're running an email phishing scam. Like what are you defending?

Stopeet

A lot of people got your UN job appointment blah blah blah.


Saying “email phishing scam” without sharing a single actual phishing email is like yelling “fire” in a movie theater without smoke. If people are referencing a UN role and recommending a training course before onboarding, that’s not phishing—that’s professional prep. The FAO often encourages candidates to take role-specific preparation. You just don’t understand the context. Try learning before accusing.
Austin2143(m): 8:19am On May 04
Kunzycool:

I really don't have your time. Na work full my hand, if not....


Interesting how the person claiming to be “too busy” is replying within minutes every time. The truth is, you’re emotionally invested in disproving something you don’t understand. Meanwhile, professionals are taking QREDIV, ing assessments, and moving into real international roles. You can keep typing or you can look up what competencies the FAO values in team candidates. Hint: cross-cultural intelligence and inclusion training is one of them.
Austin2143(m): 8:32am On May 04
Actually? The way I see it, FAO Nigeria has already implemented QREDIV® for all their staff — national and international. That’s not speculation. It’s a matter of public record:

https://talentveritas.com/nigeria-becomes-first-in-region-to-implement-qrediv

Let me quote the article directly:

“FAO Nigeria has successfully completed the first nationwide implementation of the QREDIV® Certification... following an internal skills mapping exercise conducted in late 2024.”

“Our operational reality is cross-functional and deeply multicultural,” said Dr. Helen S., HR Lead at FAO Nigeria. “We were looking for a solution that was measurable, practical, and adaptable to FAO values — QREDIV® provided exactly that.”

This isn’t some “phishing scam.” It’s a training program that actual UN teams are rolling out. It’s been tailored for intercultural communication, diversity readiness, and field coordination.

You may not like the idea that certification matters in modern recruitment—but yelling “scam” at a published FAO initiative isn’t skepticism, it’s just loud ignorance.

Still waiting for anyone to post a single shred of evidence that proves otherwise. But until then, maybe sit this one out.
QREDIV: 4:43pm On May 04
You guys entangling something.
First of all - we (QREDIV organization) are not responsible for any recruitment.
Secondly - if this whole thing is a scam, why would I share my actual name and a company in UK using it? (https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/09767013/officers)
And finally - QREDIV is a foundation that provide authorization of certifying students with QREDIV certificate

I understand in modern era of internet everybody can claim anything and don't face any consequences, but I advise you to think before you write anything about something you don't know.

God bless you
Kunzycool(m): 10:28pm On May 05
QREDIV is a SCAM!!!!


Don't pay that money, there's no job to begin with.

Know this and Know Peace.
SedulousAkanni: 12:50am On May 06
IT IS A SCAM!!!!

Your CERTIFICATION is questionable as you DECEIVE people to believe you are offering them an employment while you tease them to make payment for a course. That is SCAM as there is DECEIT in your approach.

INTELLECTUAL SCAM abi wetin I go call am.
Austin2143(m): 8:48am On May 06
Kunzycool:
QREDIV is a SCAM!!!!


Don't pay that money, there's no job to begin with.

Know this and Know Peace.

You keep repeating “scam” like it’s an argument. But the FAO Nigeria office — a real UN agency — just completed a full nationwide rollout of QREDIV® training for their staff. You can’t call that a scam unless you’re ready to say FAO Nigeria is also running one.

The certification isn’t a job offer—it’s a skills-based training recognized in real-world onboarding settings, especially in intercultural and humanitarian roles.

The irony is: while you’re yelling “don’t pay,” actual professionals are getting certified and moving forward. Misinformation doesn’t protect people—it holds them back.
Austin2143(m): 8:49am On May 06
SedulousAkanni:
IT IS A SCAM!!!!

Your CERTIFICATION is questionable as you DECEIVE people to believe you are offering them an employment while you tease them to make payment for a course. That is SCAM as there is DECEIT in your approach.

INTELLECTUAL SCAM abi wetin I go call am.

You’re confusing preparation with placement. At no point does QREDIV® promise direct employment. What it offers is verified, skill-based training in emotional intelligence and global workplace readiness—training that FAO Nigeria has already implemented for its entire staff.

The people who fall for scams are the ones who expect instant jobs without effort. QREDIV speaks clearly about being a career enhancement tool, not a job guarantee. That's not deceit—that’s transparency.

Calling something an “intellectual scam” without evidence just makes you look emotionally triggered, not informed. The world doesn’t reward noise—it rewards preparedness.
Austin2143(m): 8:52am On May 06
QREDIV:
You guys entangling something.
First of all - we (QREDIV organization) are not responsible for any recruitment.
Secondly - if this whole thing is a scam, why would I share my actual name and a company in UK using it? (https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/09767013/officers)
And finally - QREDIV is a foundation that provide authorization of certifying students with QREDIV certificate

I understand in modern era of internet everybody can claim anything and don't face any consequences, but I advise you to think before you write anything about something you don't know.

God bless you

This is one of the clearest, most grounded responses so far.

Let’s be honest—how many programs actually show you the founder’s real name, a UK-ed company, and links to actual UN-backed implementations like FAO Nigeria? That’s not the behavior of a scam; that’s what legitimate, forward-thinking training looks like.

What’s wild to me is that people are turning down something that international teams are already adopting. If you were asked to complete QREDIV, that’s not a scam—that’s an opportunity. These roles are competitive, and tools like this are exactly what set people apart in shortlisting.

While some are wasting time yelling “scam” with no proof, others are completing the certification and moving up. Don’t sleep on this.
Firebox123(m): 8:52am On May 06
Austin2143:


Your conclusion is based on shallow signals rather than substance. A domain's hosting provider or age says nothing about the legitimacy of the content it hosts. Many respected startups begin with affordable registrars like NameCheap. The real measure is the quality of the training, transparency of the team, and from those who completed it. Tech-savvy skepticism is useful—but don’t confuse it with evidence.
definitely you're the culprit and poster
Firebox123(m): 8:52am On May 06
Austin2143:


This is one of the clearest, most grounded responses so far.

Let’s be honest—how many programs actually show you the founder’s real name, a UK-ed company, and links to actual UN-backed implementations like FAO Nigeria? That’s not the behavior of a scam; that’s what legitimate, forward-thinking training looks like.

What’s wild to me is that people are turning down something that international teams are already adopting. If you were asked to complete QREDIV, that’s not a scam—that’s an opportunity. These roles are competitive, and tools like this are exactly what set people apart in shortlisting.

While some are wasting time yelling “scam” with no proof, others are completing the certification and moving up. Don’t sleep on this.
scammer
Austin2143(m): 9:00am On May 06
Kunzycool:

QREDIV is a SCAM!!! Know this and know peace.




I appreciate your diligence in sharing the FAO disclaimer. However, it's important to understand the context. The FAO's warning pertains to fraudulent job offers that falsely promise employment in exchange for money or personal information. These scams often involve poorly formatted emails or letters claiming to offer jobs at FAO, which is a serious issue.

In contrast, QREDIV is a professional training program designed to enhance skills in diversity and inclusion, which has been implemented by organizations for its staff. This initiative is about internal capacity building, not external job recruitment.

To illustrate the difference, here's an example of a typical fraudulent job offer at UNESCO:

Itopsin(m): 11:55am On May 06
Kunzycool:

QREDIV is a SCAM!!! Know this and know peace.

Thank you for this post, those guys really put in a lot to make this scam look realistic
Phoenix4000: 3:42pm On May 07
Kunzycool:
Bro!!!! 😅
You're running an email phishing scam. Like what are you defending?

Stopeet

A lot of people got your UN job appointment blah blah blah.


QREDDIV has no founder or ceo by that name
Itopsin:
[/quote]
Itopsin post=135258556:
Itopsin:
[quote author=Itopsin post=135258556]
Peacesharon: 6:14pm On May 09
You guys are lucky nairaland won't allow us post evidence from gallery. Did a lot of digging. Nigerians don't fall this scam. UN, FOA have no affiliation with these guys. Take their course if you want for other purposes but not for a job with UN or it's s. If you do, you'd be throwing away your money. They are a bunch of Crim*nals ripping people off their hard earned money. Ask Google, ask Gemini, ask people who work in UN and others.

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