Preparing for high stakes immigration visas forces you to answer a hard question: “How do I show the real impact of my work in a way attorneys can actually use?” Traditional resumes and GitHub profiles are optimized for hiring, not for evidentiary standards, outcomes, and recognition.
We have been experimenting with a structured portfolio format tailored to immigration cases. It focuses on a few simple elements for each project or achievement: what you did, why it matters, what measurable outcome it produced, and what external recognition you received. Even without new tools, anyone can start reframing their experience this way in a doc or spreadsheet.
The second experiment is using mind maps in preparation. Instead of sending two or three dense pages, you break your story into nodes: this is who I am, these are the main branches of my work, here are the key outcomes hanging off each branch, each with a short explanation. Attorneys who have seen this type of structure tell us it makes prioritizing evidence and framing arguments much easier.
We are turning these ideas into a dedicated preparation product, but the underlying approach is useful on its own. If you are working on an immigration case, or you help clients with them, I would love to hear how you currently organize achievements and what has or has not worked for you.








