How To Engineer Your Path to an O-1 Visa - w/ Harsh
Every year, hundreds of thousands of international students and tech workers face the same terrifying math: there are 85,000 H-1B seats and over 400,000 applications. The odds are not in your favor.
But what if you didn’t have to play the lottery at all?
In a recent episode of the Ready Set Do Podcast, we sat down with Harsh, an AI Architect who "speed-ran" his way from an international student (F-1) to a Director-level role and an O-1 Visa approval in just three years.
Here is how he engineered his career to bypass the H-1B trap—and how you can too.
The biggest misconception stopping tech workers from applying for the O-1A (Individuals with Extraordinary Ability) is the belief that you need to be a famous researcher.
Harsh explains that AI tools and public forums often perpetuate the idea that "if you have five publications or ten publications, you’re automatically eligible," making the visa feel inaccessible.
The reality? "O-1 isn't magic, it’s evidence," says Harsh. You don't need to be famous; you just need to prove your work is rare and impactful in your specific domain.
The USCIS requires you to meet 3 out of 8 criteria. Harsh didn't have a PhD or academic citations. Instead, he built a case around his industry impact in "AI/ML in Healthcare".
Here are the three pillars of his petition:
Harsh realized he needed tangible proof of his expertise. At Optum, his team revamped a slow healthcare search system into a "Google-like" experience for finding doctors.
The Evidence: They pulled a patent out of the project, which is now used by multiple subsidiaries.
The Lesson: You don't need academic papers. Patents and internal technology that disrupt your company's competitors count as "Original Contributions".
To satisfy the "Critical Role" criteria, Harsh strategically took on high-risk projects. He led a team to solve a patient attrition problem costing the company $11.3 billion annually.
The Evidence: He delivered the solution in four months, managed the budget, and showcased the technology at an investor conference.
The Lesson: Don't just do your job. Ask for projects that have high visibility and direct impact on the company's bottom line.
By rapidly ascending from an intern to a Lead and eventually a Principal/Director level, Harsh naturally fell into the high salary bracket. While he notes that "high salary" can be subjective based on geography, combining rapid promotions with a strong salary history strengthens the narrative of being "extraordinary".
Harsh’s O-1 success was directly tied to his aggressive career growth. He went from an intern at Autodesk to a Director-level role at SuperSet in under three years.
His secret? "Behave that you are in the role that you’re aiming for," Harsh advises. From day one, he focused on making those around him smarter and taking on the "hard problems" others refused, such as the 4-month deadline project.
Harsh applied for the O-1 immediately after his first H-1B rejection in 2023. He didn't wait for a second or third try.
If you are an engineer stuck in the lottery cycle, stop hoping for luck. Start building your evidence. As Harsh proved, the O-1 isn't reserved for scientists—it's available to anyone willing to engineer their career as carefully as they engineer their code.
Harsh: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hmacmaheshwari/
Timestamps:00:00 Intro + Background01:09 Introduction and Background02:00 The O1 Visa Journey Begins04:04 Understanding O1 Visa Criteria07:12 Building a Strong Profile for O110:59 The Role of Legal Representation12:46 Challenges in the Application Process18:26 Comparing O1 and H1B Visas22:25 Final Thoughts on O1 Visa Benefits26:06 Understanding the O1 Visa Benefits28:26 Harsh's Career Journey: From Intern to Senior Engineer34:13 The Importance of Mentorship and Team Culture45:34 Taking Risks: Managing High-Stakes Projects49:50 Connecting with Harsh: Final Thoughts and Advice