Do not begin with "Do I qualify?"
Most EB2 NIW profile-review posts start with a list: degree, job title, papers, citations, patents, salary, employer, and recommendation letters.
That list matters, but it is not the first question. NIW is not a generic talent award. The profile has to support a proposed endeavor, and the proposed endeavor has to matter beyond one private job.
So the first useful review question is narrower: what future work are you asking USCIS to treat as nationally important, and what proof shows you are positioned to advance it?
The one-sentence test
Write one sentence in this shape:
I will advance [specific work] for [specific users, patients, industry, public need, or field problem] by [concrete method, product, research, deployment, or operating plan].
Weak examples stay at the occupation level: "I work in AI," "I am a software engineer," "I improve healthcare," or "I want to build a startup."
Stronger examples name the work and the proof problem:
- Improving deployment of fraud-detection models for regional banks, with evidence from shipped systems, risk reduction, and adoption by compliance teams.
- Advancing clinical-trial operations for oncology studies, with proof from protocol execution, site coordination, measurable cycle-time improvements, and future implementation plans.
- Building safety tooling for industrial robotics, with evidence from patents, technical deployments, independent use, and a work plan beyond the current employer.
The sentence does not decide the case. It makes the rest of the review honest.
Map the profile to the three NIW questions
USCIS frames NIW around three questions: whether the proposed endeavor has substantial merit and national importance, whether the person is well positioned to advance it, and whether waiving the job-offer and labor-certification requirements would benefit the United States.
Turn that into a table before you pay for a review or file a packet.
| NIW question | What to map | Weak pattern |
|---|---|---|
| Substantial merit and national importance | The problem, affected field or public need, and why the work matters beyond one employer. | "My field is important," with no specific endeavor. |
| Well positioned | Past work, implementation proof, publications, grants, patents, shipped systems, letters that explain facts, and a credible future plan. | A list of achievements with no link to the proposed endeavor. |
| Waiver benefit | Why the work should move without a labor-certification process tied to one job offer. | "I am qualified, so waive it," without a national-interest reason. |
Recommendation letters should explain proof, not substitute for it
Letters are useful when they explain facts an officer can evaluate: implementation, independent use, field relevance, technical difficulty, or why the future work is credible.
They are weak when they only say the applicant is talented, hardworking, or important.
Before asking for letters, assign each letter a job:
- One letter explains the real-world use of a project.
- One letter explains why the future endeavor matters outside the employer.
- One letter connects a past achievement to the proposed plan.
- One letter clarifies technical depth that a resume cannot show.
If you cannot name the job of a letter, it probably belongs later, not at the center of the strategy.
Profile review is different from petition proofreading
A profile review asks whether the theory is coherent. Petition proofreading asks whether the drafted packet says that theory clearly.
Do not jump to proofreading when the theory is still fuzzy. If the proposed endeavor is vague, proofreading will only make a weak filing sound smoother.
A useful review should leave you with four things:
- A one-sentence proposed endeavor.
- A prong-by-prong evidence map.
- A list of proof gaps that need real documents, not adjectives.
- A decision on whether the next paid step is filing, attorney strategy, RFE repair, or more evidence building.
When the profile may not be ready
Slow down when the strongest proof belongs only to your employer, the future plan is a job description, or every letter would need to explain the case because the documents do not.
Also slow down when the endeavor is just a field name. "AI for healthcare" is not the same as a proposed endeavor. "Clinical decision support for hospital readmission risk, supported by deployed models, measured outcomes, and a work plan for broader adoption" gives the reviewer something to test.
Official baseline to keep in view
USCIS says NIW applicants may self-petition and that the endeavor must be assessed through the three national-interest factors. The USCIS Policy Manual also discusses evidence such as detailed proposals or plans, letters, business plans, patents, published work, grants, and other proof that can show a person is well positioned to advance the endeavor.
Use those official materials as a floor. If a paid review cannot explain your case in that structure, the review is probably not specific enough.
Bottom line
Do not ask strangers whether your EB2 NIW profile is strong from a credential list alone.
Ask whether the proposed endeavor is specific, whether the evidence supports the three NIW questions, and whether the next filing step is clear.
If you need to build that map before an attorney review, RFE response, or self-filed packet, use the ChatEB1 EB2 NIW Kit to organize the proposed endeavor, Dhanasar prongs, evidence map, and handoff notes.