Healthcare IT at a global company — and a NIW case that needed the right people behind it
Levi O is an IT Project Lead specialising in healthcare technology management. His work sits at the intersection of two areas the NIW framework handles well: technology with direct economic impact, and healthcare innovation with clear national importance. He came to Write Wing Media after researching the firm’s track record on complex cases. His credentials were strong — the challenge was assembling the right evidence package and, critically, finding endorsers with the stature to carry the recommendation letters.
IT project management is broadly important — the petition had to make it specifically important
The NIW’s national interest standard requires more than demonstrating that your field matters. It requires showing that your specific work, in your specific role, produces outcomes the US has a direct interest in — and that you are well-positioned to continue producing those outcomes without the constraints of employer sponsorship.
For an IT Project Lead, the risk is that the case reads as generic: technology is important, healthcare is important, therefore this person is important. That argument doesn’t hold under scrutiny. Write Wing Media needed to anchor Levi’s petition in concrete outcomes — the scale of projects managed, the specific healthcare systems improved, the documented economic and patient care impact — and then connect those specifics to the NIW’s three-pronged test.
Five months — most of it spent finding endorsers who could speak with authority
The build took five months. Levi’s work commitments meant the process ran alongside a demanding job, but the main pacing factor was the recommendation letters. Finding endorsers who carry genuine weight — seniority, relevant expertise, standing in the field — and then working through the content with them to ensure each letter addressed the NIW criteria directly takes time. Write Wing Media refined letters Levi had already obtained, drafted additional letters for new endorsers, and guided both Levi and his recommenders through multiple rounds of feedback.
Beyond the letters, the team built out the full petition package: a comprehensive cover letter, a detailed petition letter, a personal statement, a compiled exhibit list with table of contents, and supporting evidence for each claim. Each achievement was substantiated — managing multi-million dollar project portfolios, driving technology implementations that directly affected patient care — with context that translated the scale of Levi’s work into terms an adjudicator without specialist knowledge could evaluate.
Rejected on a fee, resubmitted, approved — no RFE on either attempt
The first submission was rejected: an incorrect processing fee meant USCIS returned the application without reviewing it. This is a procedural rejection, not a substantive one — it says nothing about the petition’s merits. Levi resubmitted with the correct premium processing fee. USCIS reviewed the same package and approved it on September 5, 2024, without issuing a Request for Evidence.
The clean approval on resubmission confirms what the fee rejection obscured: the petition was ready. The five-month build produced a package that held up on first substantive review.
A procedural setback is not a substantive one — know the difference
Levi’s case is useful precisely because the fee rejection looks alarming and means very little. A returned application for an incorrect processing fee tells you nothing about whether your petition will survive USCIS scrutiny. What matters is what happened when the adjudicator actually read it: approved, no RFE. The five months of careful construction — the right endorsers, the right letter content, the evidence anchored to concrete outcomes — produced a petition that didn’t give the adjudicator anything to push back on.



