EB-1A Approval · Insurance Technology & Digital Transformation
Core Platforms, AI Underwriting, and
Field-Level Influence
This case shows how enterprise consulting work, often dismissed as too team-based for EB-1A, can meet the extraordinary ability standard when framed around decision authority, cross-carrier adoption, and measurable business impact. The approval was built on a coherent excellence story rather than a stack of awards or academic credentials.
Overview of the EB-1A Case
We did not pile on every criterion. We rebuilt a coherent excellence story from enterprise, team-based work that was powerful in substance but weak in immigration framing. This was not about volume. It was about translation, positioning, and high-quality evidence that linked the client’s decision authority to measurable business impact and field adoption.
Instead of relying on generic consulting titles or a long list of projects, the petition focused on:
The originality of the client's architecture patterns reused across carriers
The measurable impact of those contributions on underwriting automation and compliance
The reliance of distinguished insurers on the client's design and implementation judgment
The client's standing among peers shaping insurance-core platform practice
02 — EB1A Criteria
Five pillars of the petition.
01

Critical and Leading Role for Distinguished Organizations
Evidence included senior partner and client letters describing strategic dependence, project maps showing decision authority over policy modeling, underwriting automation, and regulatory compliance across 70-plus countries, and documentation of ownership for core platform components covering policy, billing, and claims integrations.
USCIS evaluates leading or critical role based on whether the role was essential to operations and hard to replace. The evidence clearly demonstrated both.
02

Original Contributions of Major Significance
The client’s designs were not shelf patents. They were live, reused, and shaping insurer behavior across the industry. Major significance was established through implementation and cross-carrier adoption, not theoretical claims.
03

High Remuneration
USCIS asks whether pay demonstrates rarity. The benchmarking evidence showed it did, positioning the client among the small percentage at the top of the niche.
04

Judging the Work of Others
This was professional judgment rather than ceremonial reviewing, evidencing peer reliance and field-level recognition that USCIS treats as a marker of extraordinary ability.
03

Authorship and Targeted Thought Leadership
Quality over quantity. Writings and talks were selected to show influence among practitioners, not to pad a résumé.
-Team Jinee
How the pieces fit together.
The skillset itself, insurance core platforms combined with AI underwriting and digital transformation expertise, was positioned as rare and mission-critical to financial stability and risk management for carriers, national and regional insurance infrastructure, and how insurers automate and scale underwriting and compliance.
03 — Takeaways
What you can learn from this EB-1A Approval
01
Define a tight niche
Don’t be generic. Specialization wins when it is narrowly defined and high-impact.
02
Quantify everything
Deployments, reuse, financial impact, and operational scale should all carry numbers.
03
Reframe enterprise work
Translate team-based consulting into decision-making narratives showing who depended on you and why.
04
Depth over padding
Build deep evidence on 3 to 5 criteria rather than spreading thin across weak items.
High standards. Stronger with strategy.
EB-1A Approval Rates and Why Strategy Matters
This case demonstrates that a well-structured EB-1A petition grounded in real enterprise impact, cross-carrier adoption, and credible expert insight can succeed even without traditional academic credentials, brand-name awards, or a long list of independent prizes. It was not a checkbox petition. It was a field-level influence case executed with surgical precision.