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by TheDom
4077 days ago
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It is possible if you go for an L-1 visa where a degree is not a prerequisite. If you work for a subsidiary of a US company outside of the US for at least one year then you can transfer on the L-1 visa to their US office. Just be aware that you can't switch companies like you could on an H-1B. However, L-1 visa holders can still apply for a green card. Once you have that you're free to change employers. One technicality: If you work for a big company (like Google) then you're basically guaranteed to get the L-1 after one year since those companies typically hold the so called L-1 blanket. Otherwise it's a more involved process where you might get rejected. I have friends who are currently on an L-1 in SF through big companies (= L-1 blanket holders) and getting it was basically a formality. The L-1 also has the advantage that there is no annual cap like there is on the H-1B. You get it or you don't. No lottery. One big startup that I interviewed with opened up an office in Vancouver specifically for H-1B rejects to get them to their main office in SF through the L-1 one year later. More information on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-1_visa |
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