Customer Story 1: File NIW in One Day!

February 29, 2024, 3:29PM

This is unbelievable! One of our NIWKit customers filed his NIW petition in just one day! Here's the story he shared! P.S. I translated it from Chinese to English.

Customer Story:

I previously had a rather laissez-faire attitude towards handling NIW matters, feeling it was pointless and it's better to wait for an EB1. I also consulted with a popular law firm, and while they offered an approved or refund service for a few thousand dollars, I heard it still required months to write the SOC, taking a lot of effort, so I put it on hold. Recently, I discovered an interesting website called quickfiling.us, which can automatically generate the necessary documents based on previously published articles. As an ordinary state university PhD who graduated last year and now doing postdoc at an ordinary branch of the University of California with five published articles and around fifty citations, I found the process quite straightforward. First, I created a profile and filled in some basic information, then entered my Google Scholar link to pull my articles automatically. You can also add your own reviews, proof, media, etc. It's advised to write down your research experience in detail. After finding all the articles, you can categorize them by research topic to help prove that your research fits the NIW category, then look for citations and see how others have cited your work. It's important to go into detail here and manually remove self-citations. After that, you can generate the report and create a Dropbox folder with the PL, SOC, and other necessary files generated. A nice feature is that you can screenshot and automatically number where others have cited your work, which took about two hours in the afternoon. You can ask customer service for Dropbox permissions to edit the generated PL online and check for errors. It's worth mentioning that customer service is very responsive, almost instantly. In the evening, I checked the generated SOC and PL, and it seemed fine. I like that it can generate a citation summary for each article, which saved me a lot of time. Honestly, I never carefully looked at many of the citations myself and didn't know how others evaluated my work. I wrote about ten pages of citation highlights and was able to summarize separately based on the research topic I categorized before. The final PL was about a dozen pages, which would have taken me months to write myself. The SOC includes a summary of the articles and citations at the beginning, a part of the PL's notable citation, and then a summary based on each article to prove the importance of your research, about twenty pages, saving me a lot of time. Before going home, I spent an hour filling out forms 140, 9089, 1145, and 14.50, and the next morning at ten, I went to UPS to send the files, taking exactly one day.