Latest Insights & Stories
Expert insights on U.S. immigration visas — O-1, EB-1A, EB-2 NIW, E-2, L-1 and more.

The Two-Track U.S. Immigration Plan for Founders and Executives
March 15, 2026
Building in the United States is rarely blocked by ambition. It is blocked by timing.

What an “AI-Powered” U.S. Visa or Green Card Process Should Actually Look Like
March 15, 2026
A strong opportunity can still fall apart because the case was assembled with weak evidence, unclear positioning, or avoidable inconsistencies.

What “USCIS-Ready” Actually Looks Like for Founders and High-Skill Professionals
March 15, 2026
Most visa and green card denials are not caused by a lack of talent. They are caused by a lack of *structure*.

What It Can (and Cannot) Do for High-Stakes Visa and Green Card Cases
March 14, 2026
“AI-powered immigration” is quickly becoming a category. The problem is that most people hear the phrase and assume one of two extremes: either the software magically guarantees approval, or it is a glorified chatbot that cannot be trusted for something as consequential as a U.S. visa or green card.

How to Choose the Right U.S. Immigration Partner
March 14, 2026
If you are a founder, executive, or high-achieving professional building a future in the United States, immigration is not a paperwork task. It is a business-critical project with real downside: missed hiring windows, delayed fundraising plans, disrupted travel, and months of momentum lost to uncert

How Founders and High Achievers Stay in Control of a U.S. Immigration Case
March 14, 2026
Filing a visa or green card petition is not the finish line. It is the handoff from your preparation phase to a government workflow with its own rules, timelines, and failure points.

After You File: What Actually Happens Next
March 14, 2026
Filing your petition is a milestone, but it is not the finish line. For most high-skilled applicants, “we filed” simply means you are now entering the phase where government timelines, evidence discipline, and process decisions matter most.

9 Questions to Ask Before You Spend $8,000 to $12,000 on a U.S. Visa or Green Card
March 13, 2026
Choosing an immigration partner is not like choosing a vendor for design or payroll. The outcome affects where you can live, whether you can work, and how confidently you can build a company or career in the United States. It is also expensive, document-heavy, and often opaque.

What “Risk-Free” Should Mean in a High-Stakes U.S. Visa or Green Card Case
March 13, 2026
Most immigration decisions are framed as a binary: approved or denied. But the real risk in a founder or high-skill case is rarely binary. It is financial exposure, lost time, and momentum you cannot get back.