
ENDEAVOR STATEMENTS | BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL PLANS
Immigration plans — a detailed description of your proposed endeavor.
When USCIS issues an RFE on an EB-1, EB-2 NIW, E-2, L-1, or O-1 petition, it frequently requests additional information — often in the form of a Business Plan or Professional Plan. USCIS commonly asks specifically for a "detailed description of the proposed endeavor." Both types of plan can satisfy this requirement.
ProfVal offers both — developed through 1:1 collaboration with experienced writers, refined through years of RFE feedback from hundreds of law firms, and built to meet the specific evidentiary requirements of each visa type.
CHOOSING THE RIGHT ENDEAVOR STATEMENT
Business plan or professional plan — which is right for your petition?
The right choice depends on your visa type, your proposed endeavor, and your attorney's case strategy. Here's a practical guide — your attorney will confirm which is appropriate.
EB-2 NIW · EB-1 · E-2 · L-1 · O-1 · EB-5
Immigration Business Plan
A business plan may be the right fit if your proposed endeavor involves:
Starting or operating a business
Hiring employees or generating revenue
A capital investment requiring financial projections
An enterprise with defined products or services
An ownership structure requiring formal documentation
EB-2 NIW · EB-1
Professional Plan
A professional plan may be the right fit if your proposed endeavor involves:
Professional services, research, or artistic work
Working for an established employer or on a freelance basis
No formal business startup or capital investment
Academic, scientific, or creative endeavors
A Business Plan typically covers content within a Professional Plan — they are not usually ordered together. Your attorney will advise which is right for your case. Read our full guide to plan types →
Save $100 on your Expert Opinion Letter when bundled with a plan. EB-2 NIW, EB-1, L-1, and O-1 plans can be ordered alongside an Expert Opinion Letter — developed together, documents are built symbiotically. Attorney cc on order qualifies for law firm pricing. Ask about bundle pricing →
ENDEAVOR STATEMENTS BY VISA TYPE
What your immigration plan must demonstrate — by visa type.
Each visa category has distinct USCIS requirements. The plan type and content vary accordingly. Select your visa type for the full plan details.
EB-1A · EB-1B
EB-1 Business or Professional Plans
Must demonstrate the essential role of the petitioner's extraordinary ability or research credentials in the success of the proposed enterprise. Final merits discussion increasingly recommended under current USCIS standards.
L-1A · L-1B
L-1 Business Plan
Must demonstrate that the U.S. entity is a qualifying organization and that the operation will grow to support an executive, managerial, or specialized knowledge role. Especially important for new-office L-1 cases.
EB-2 NIW
EB-2 NIW Business or Professional Plans
Must demonstrate the three Dhanasar prongs — substantial merit, national importance, and petitioner positioning.
Available as a Business Plan or Professional Plan depending on whether the endeavor involves a business enterprise.
O-1
O-1 Business Plan
Must demonstrate credible, non-speculative business activity — through contracts, revenue models, and operational strategy — and establish a legitimate employer-employee structure showing the petitioner operates under independent oversight.
E-2
E-2 Business Plan
Must establish that the investment is substantial, the enterprise is bona fide, and the investor will actively direct the business. E-2 plans are intentionally concise — consular officers prefer focused, well-evidenced documents.
EB-5
EB-5 Business Plan
Must meet the Matter of Ho standard — demonstrating creation of at least 10 full-time W-2 jobs, a qualifying capital investment, and lawful source and path of funds. Among the most complex plans in immigration.
CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
Refined through years of RFE feedback and attorney collaboration.
ProfVal has partnered with hundreds of leading immigration law firms to support thousands of RFE responses across EB-1, EB-2 NIW, E-2, L-1, and O-1 visa categories. Our approach is continuously updated based on what attorneys tell us works — and what USCIS is questioning.
USCIS-aligned from day one
Every plan is structured around the specific evidentiary concerns USCIS raises most frequently for that visa type — not a generic business plan template adapted for immigration.
MBA and PhD editors
Each plan is edited by a professional with an MBA or PhD in a business field — under ProfVal's PhD-founded research framework. Writers are experienced professionals, not generalists.
Attorney collaboration built in
We align every plan with your attorney's case strategy. An optional 1:1 video consultation with an experienced editor is available for each plan.
Unlimited revisions for 60 days.
Why generic and AI-generated plans now carry higher risk: Under the January 2025 USCIS guidance, officers are explicitly instructed to look for clear, specific, independently corroborated evidence — not just well-written narrative. A plan that sounds polished but lacks specificity or relies on recycled language is more likely to receive an RFE than it was before 2025.
ProfVal's plans are written to meet this standard by design.
GET STARTED
We'll respond within one business day
BENEFICIARIES & PETITIONERS
Ready to build your strongest possible case?
We work exclusively with petitioners who attest that they have legal representation. Tell us about your visa type and we'll connect you with the right services.
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Receive preferred pricing if your attorney confirms legal representation.
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1:1 video call available with fully refundable deposit (see terms)
IMMIGRATION ATTORNEYS
Ready to build the strongest possible case for your clients?
AILA members and partner firms receive preferential rates. Whether you need a single EOL or ongoing support across your practice, we're built for how attorneys work.
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AILA member discount available
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Dedicated attorney onboarding
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95% of our cases are with returning clients
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Free 1:1 video call consultation when you contact us with your law firm email address.
















