Victor Olayemi
Victor Olayemi is a highly motivated professional with a background in Statistics, with over five (5) years of experience in program management, implementation, strategic information, and data analysis. He joined SCIDaR as an intern in 2016 and soon realized it was the best decision aside from getting married to the love of his life.

Victor’s SCIDaR experience is phenomenal, challenging, and fun.

About Victor

Victor Olayemi is a highly motivated professional with a background in Statistics, with over five (5) years of experience in program management, implementation, strategic information, and data analysis. He joined SCIDaR as an intern in 2016 and soon realized it was the best decision aside from getting married to the love of his life.

Working at SCIDaR

He acknowledges that working at SCIDaR has been phenomenal, challenging, and fun; offering a unique work environment that combines strings of innovation, impact, and spontaneity. In his current role as a Program Associate, he supported the Nigeria Emergency Operation Centre (EOC) for a coordinated response to the cVDPV2 outbreak and Covid vaccination effort in Nigeria. This support includes coordination, high-level collaborative strategic thinking with government leaders and other partners, and data analytic to drive decision-making.
He recently supported Kano state and six (6) other states to monitor the quality of their Covid response, supporting the development and design of strategies such as community testing amongst others with data-driven shreds of evidence while also ensuring the continuous delivery of essential services across PHCs.

Education

University of Abuja, Nigeria
B.Sc Statistics

Volunteer

SCIDaR offers dynamic and rewarding opportunities to individuals who desire to gain experience and develop key professional skills while also working to contribute to SCIDaR’s organizational goals within six (6) months.

Our
Mission

Our vision is to become a leading organization working to accelerate social, health, and economic development of under- served populations