Licensed U.S. attorney-led team for immigration and IP strategy

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AL Ava Na Li Immigration + IP Counsel

U.S. Immigration and Market Entry Legal Services

Two clear paths: build your U.S. status, or protect your U.S. brand.

Get direct attorney-led guidance, bilingual communication, and a practical next step based on your actual situation.

Ava Li portrait

For Students and Professionals Staying in the U.S.

Pathway planning from current visa status to long-term immigration goals.

  • NIW / EB-1 positioning and evidence strategy
  • I-485 timing and filing risk control
  • Waivers and response planning for complex cases
  • Naturalization, military-related paths, and status transition planning
  • Student status, work authorization, and other transition questions that affect long-term planning

For Chinese Companies Entering the U.S. Market

Trademark and copyright execution for cross-border growth and risk reduction.

  • U.S. trademark filing and office action response
  • TTAB opposition and cancellation strategy
  • Copyright registration and enforcement workflow
  • Brand protection for platform sales, licensing, and cross-border expansion
  • Related business support when trademark, copyright, contracts, and launch timing start to overlap

Who You’ll Be Working With

Confirm your immigration priority in 5 minutes.

After this short review, you receive a clear next-step recommendation and a consultation-ready case brief to reduce repetitive intake time.

Step 2 of 8 Anonymous mode on

Current immigration stage

Which stage best matches your current situation?

We only ask details needed for legal risk assessment.

Trademark Services

Trademark Registration

A structured legal service page for core practice areas. This layout is designed to carry high-value service URLs with clearer hierarchy, stronger trust signals, and cleaner conversion paths.

What This Page Needs To Do

For migration, this layout needs to support service pages such as trademark registration, waivers, PERM/I-140, copyright registration, and naturalization. The page should explain the matter clearly, show who it is for, and lead to one strong next step.

Compared with the homepage, this template should feel calmer and more specific. It should give the user enough detail to decide whether this is their issue, without turning into a long article or a generic marketing page.

Recommended Structure

Scope of service

Explain what the firm handles, what is included, and what users should prepare before starting.

Who this is for

State the client situations this page is meant to help, so the reader can self-qualify quickly.

Process and timing

Set expectations around sequence, attorney work, government steps, and response timing.

CTA with trust

Keep one consultation CTA and one form CTA, supported by concise trust and communication details.

Page-Level FAQ

Should every service page include a long legal explanation?

No. Core service pages should stay practical. Search-driven educational depth can live in separate topic pages that link back here.

How should this differ from article pages?

Service pages should center on fit, scope, process, and conversion. Article pages should center on explanation, search intent, and reading flow.

Immigration Topic Guide

I-485 Adjustment of Status vs. Consular Processing

A search-driven topic layout for pages that need to explain a legal issue clearly, earn trust through structure, and still guide readers toward the right next step.

Quick Orientation

This layout is for explanation-first pages

Use it for high-intent search topics where readers need clarity before they are ready to contact the firm.

The page should feel easy to scan

Short sections, strong subheads, and summary cards matter more here than service-page persuasion blocks.

Conversion still matters, just later

The page should educate first, then offer consultation, related services, and official resources in a calmer way.

When This Layout Works Best

This template is for pages like I-485 timing, waiver options, OPT planning, trademark office actions, or other topics where users are searching for an explanation before deciding whether they need legal help.

Compared with a service page, this layout should support deeper reading. It should help the user understand the issue, compare paths, and recognize where professional review becomes important.

Compare the Two Paths

Adjustment of status
Consular processing
Best fit
You are in the U.S. and want to continue from current status if eligible.
You will complete immigrant visa processing through a U.S. consulate abroad.
Main concern
Timing, maintenance of status, travel, and filing sequence.
Interview prep, travel planning, and processing variability outside the U.S.
Why users seek advice
To avoid filing too early, travel mistakes, or status gaps.
To assess consular risk, document readiness, and timeline tradeoffs.

Suggested Reading Structure

Start with the decision question

Open with the real comparison or uncertainty the user is trying to solve, not with firm-centric copy.

Explain the two or three main paths

Break the issue into concrete route options with timing, risk, and eligibility differences.

Flag practical risk factors

Surface the travel, document, deadline, or status risks that usually cause users to seek legal help.

Close with next-step options

Offer related service pages, official sources, and one consultation CTA after the reader has context.

Risk Flags That Usually Change the Answer

Planned international travel during a pending process

Prior status gaps, denials, or other history issues

Family or work timing that limits when you can file or leave

Unclear eligibility or overlapping immigration strategies

Example FAQ

Should article pages read like blog posts?

Not exactly. They should answer search-driven questions clearly, but still feel structured, authoritative, and close to legal guidance.

How is this different from a service page?

Article pages are explanation-first. Service pages are action-first. They should link to each other rather than compete.

Official Updates and Related Links

Attorney Insight

What Clients Often Miss When Comparing Immigration Timing Options

A layout for attorney-authored analysis pieces that should feel more personal and interpretive than a topic guide, while still staying structured and easy to scan.

Author View

Many clients do not struggle because the law is impossible to read. They struggle because multiple legally possible options collide with real-life timing, risk tolerance, and incomplete information. This type of page should preserve that attorney perspective.

Why This Layout Exists

Some migrated pages are not pure service pages and not pure search guides. They are attorney-written pieces where judgment, emphasis, and practical interpretation matter. This layout should let that voice come through.

The page still needs structure, but it should feel closer to a signed analysis than a decision matrix. Readers should understand that a lawyer is explaining how to think about the issue, not just listing options.

The legal answer is often narrower than the practical answer a client actually needs.

Recommended Structure

Open with the real misconception

Start from what clients usually misunderstand, rather than from a neutral encyclopedia explanation.

Add attorney judgment

State what tends to matter more in practice, even when multiple legal paths are technically available.

Use examples, not just rules

Short scenario-style examples make the article feel grounded and more distinctly attorney-authored.

End with a narrower next step

The CTA should feel like an invitation to discuss a nuanced issue, not a generic handoff into a form.

Example Framing Blocks

Where clients over-focus

They often fixate on which path sounds faster in the abstract, instead of what could disrupt their actual filing timeline.

Where attorney review helps

Counsel is most useful when travel, prior history, family timing, or business planning changes the practical value of each option.

What the article should do

It should leave the reader feeling guided by a professional point of view, not just informed by a template.

When To Turn This Into a Consultation

If the answer depends on travel plans, prior history, employer timing, or family constraints, this is usually where attorney-specific advice becomes more valuable than general reading.