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Most people think USCIS decisions are purely legal. They’re not. Behind every EB-1 or EB-2 NIW petition is a human adjudicator—a USCIS officer applying law, discretion, workload pressure, and judgment to your case. Understanding how officers think is often the difference between approval and denial. In this video, I break down the psychology of a USCIS officer and explain how EB-1 and EB-2 NIW cases are really evaluated—from the moment an officer opens your file to the final decision. This is not speculation. It’s a strategic look at how adjudicators assess credibility, consistency, national importance, and overall persuasiveness—beyond simply counting criteria. 🎯 What You’ll Learn How USCIS officers mentally approach EB-1 and EB-2 NIW cases Why strong credentials still get denied What officers look for before they look at your evidence How narrative clarity influences adjudication outcomes The difference between legal sufficiency and persuasive strength How officer discretion shapes RFEs, NOIDs, and denials Common psychological red flags that quietly sink petitions If you’re preparing an EB-1 Extraordinary Ability or EB-2 National Interest Waiver petition—or responding to an RFE or NOID—this video will help you see your case the way an officer sees it. 📌 Important: Immigration success is not just about eligibility. It’s about how convincingly your case is presented to the person deciding it. 🔔 Subscribe for Officer-Focused Immigration Strategy On this channel, I share practical insights on: EB-1 Extraordinary Ability EB-2 NIW strategy USCIS adjudication patterns RFEs, NOIDs, and final merits analysis Salary evidence, national interest framing, and petition structure 👍 Like the video if this was helpful 💬 Drop your EB-1 or EB-2 question in the comments—I read them all