The visa interview is the final stage of the long and difficult employment-based immigration process. Applicants in the United States have completed the following steps to enter this phase:
A. Must find A qualified and willing sponsor employer
B. Receipt of Alien Employment Certificate (ALC) from the Department of Labor (DOL)
C, apply for immigration from the Citizenship and Immigration Service (BCIS) and get an immigration permit
D. Obtain a visa file number from the Joint Visa Center (NVC).
The beneficiary of the visa must do some preparatory work for the final visa interview. The U.S. consul conducting the interview is usually very busy, so the time devoted to each interview is very short. It is important that your answers be concise, truthful, and correct. Therefore, it is useful to rehearse before the actual interview.
①. What does the consular officer really want to know during the interview?
Consuls are responsible for U.S. immigration laws. The consul wants to make sure all documents are authentic and legitimate. In general, if the documents are in order, clean, trusted, and consistent; If you are happy to answer the questions, the answers are correct and consistent, then the visa will be approved soon.
The interviewer's appearance and attitude.
Look clean, but do not wear too flashy to show off (such as wearing jewelry, earrings, rings, etc.). You should dress appropriately for your profession. If the job candidate is going to be a building manager, but he or she looks like a supervisor, and the consul doubts the real job the candidate is going to do in the United States, the consul will refuse a visa.
Although the interviewer is worried about whether the interview will pass or not, you should greet the consul with a smile and confidence. During the whole interview, you should focus your attention on the consul's face and not on his shoes or anything else. It is polite for the consul to ask you questions and for you to answer them.
The language used in the interview
If you can speak simple interview English, it is best to speak English during the interview. If you don't understand something, you can ask the consul to repeat it or ask someone else to explain it to you. For some professions, a visa will be refused if you do not speak English at the interview. The best advice is that you practice speaking English every day before the interview. Because in America you have to speak English to get your daily work done.