The operations and extension section has covered each slice of the first year: hiring on rhythm, building independent revenue, closing monthly books, dissecting extension filings, handling RFEs, managing two offices, quarterly KPI dashboards, the 24-month EB-1C roadmap, and the crisis handbook. Each article answers one question — this final one answers the remaining question from someone about to depart: how do all these things actually fit into 12 months?
Below is the month-by-month timeline of a standard first year — use it like a wall map: one chapter per quarter, a few key items per month, and filing milestones marked in red. Plus three key lessons that every family who went before nods to, and a guide connecting to the rest of the roadmap.
Months 1-3 — Setting the Rhythm: The Quarter of Proper Beginnings
Month 1: the first week following the settlement handbook (documents, housing, school for children) runs parallel to the first week of business — activate payroll and insurance, establish accounting systems connected to bank and POS, print the staffing plan as a hiring schedule, hold the first team meeting with minutes (for M&A path: this is the first 100 days of the acquisition section). Month 2: the first hiring wave runs, seed orders and independent customer pipeline launch, the first month-end close — the most important working session of the month. Month 3: the two-office coordination rhythm becomes routine, the first quarterly review with preliminary dashboards.
Quarter close: don't measure this quarter by revenue — measure by how many rhythms are running smoothly: month-end close, first two weeks of meetings, hiring pipeline, cash flow channels. These four rhythms are your operating system; everything after runs on them.
Months 4-6 — Structured Acceleration: Independent Customers and First Management Layer
Months 4-5: independent customer campaigns peak (trade shows, direct outreach, community channels — according to your chosen model), trial orders gradually convert to repeat orders; second hiring wave per staffing plan. Month 6: an organizational milestone worth marking — appoint the first team lead/supervisor in writing (promote from within if you have the right person), and the second quarterly review: the first time your dashboard has two periods to compare trajectory.
This is also the quarter when families start feeling the reality of managing two offices: the branch gradually encroaches on Vietnam morning hours — if you maintain morning discipline this quarter, you maintain it all year. The green light signals of the quarter: independent customer percentage ticks up noticeably, and no red flags on the parent company side.
Months 7-9 — Toward Extension: From Operations to Packaging
Month 7: the third quarterly review doubles as pre-extension diagnosis — run the plan-vs-actual comparison, circle the gaps, and identify what you can improve in the remaining 2-3 months (a supplemental hiring wave, an independent customer push campaign). Months 8-9: launch extension filing package assembly per the dissection framework — gather the four pillars from monthly/quarterly records, work with counsel on support letters and proactive comparisons, package Vietnam-side evidence completely (the other half of the filing has no holiday).
The paradox to manage this quarter: the filing demands attention precisely when the business needs momentum — define roles clearly (operations team carries operations, principal reserves specific hours for filing) and remember that every strong number generated this quarter makes it into the filing: dual motivation so no one gets to slack.
Months 10-12 — File, Wait With Discipline, and Close the Year With Numbers
Month 10 (or per the backward calculation from each family's I-94 expiration): file the extension within the standard window, premium processing if the family's timeline needs early certainty. The waiting period: normal operations is the mandate — every new contract and new hire from these weeks both feeds the business and serves as backup ammunition if an RFE arrives (the playbook already has a dedicated section); travel discipline stays tight. Month 12: close the year with your CPA — the first tax season launches, the first year return is the king document for every filing period after.
And the fourth quarter review — the most special session of the year: read the entire year on one page, update the four-pillar maturity indicators for the first time as an I-140 candidate, write the first line of year-two planning per the 24-month roadmap. If the extension result has come back: the year's champagne moment — and right after it, the first line of the checklist preparing for the next tier.
Three Key Lessons and the Next Map
Lesson one — the winning rhythm: every filing period of the year (extension, RFE if any, and I-140 ahead) is decided by boring month-end closes and bland weekly meeting minutes, not by polished documents or last-minute scrambling. Lesson two — two offices are one filing: the parent company is not a rear base allowed to forget; it's one half of every evidence set. Lesson three — real business is the only durable filing strategy: every first-year decision just prioritizes building a decent business, then documenting it — strong filings are byproducts, never replacement goals.
The next map for year two: the EB-1C section awaits with maturity measures, timing selection, concurrent filing, and the full 4-year picture; the cost-tax-capital section for the first tax season; and the settlement section for the family life part growing in parallel. Year one closes — the branch from a business plan has become a business with numbers, people, and rhythms: exactly the material every chapter after in the roadmap needs.
Note: this article is informational reference, not legal or immigration advice. Visa-L1.com is a business and operations consulting firm, not a law firm; all L-1A and EB-1C legal filings are drafted and submitted directly by US-licensed immigration attorneys. Government fees and USCIS policy may change; verify at the time of filing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which month of the first year is most critical?
Month 1 — not because there's the most work, but because it sets the rhythm: accounting systems, payroll, hiring schedule, documented meetings launching from this month means the whole year runs on that foundation; miss it and every month after is cleanup. The principle of this entire section condensed: building clean from the start costs almost nothing, fixing it later is expensive and might miss the filing timeline.
How should first-year revenue targets be set realistically?
According to the forecast you filed — because it will be the measuring stick for your extension — with the right interpretation: absolute shortfall is permitted with explanation (60-85% with upward trajectory is the common zone for new offices), but the structure must shift in the right direction: independent customer percentage grows gradually, repeat customers appear by year-end. Revenue quality saves revenue levels; the reverse doesn't work.
For newly arrived families, how do you prioritize business work versus settlement?
First two weeks: settlement first (documents, housing, school for children) — if the family isn't settled, the principal can't be fully focused; from week three: business takes the main axis with the month-1 rhythms from the timeline. Common experience from families who went before: early investment in spouse and children's stability is the largest indirect investment in the business itself.
After finishing this section, what should I read next?
Depending on where you are on the roadmap: about to depart or just arrived — the settlement section and the series on opening/acquiring a business; mid-first year — the quarterly KPI article and extension dissection are two tools to use immediately; past extension — shift fully to the EB-1C section with the 24-month roadmap and maturity indicators. The entire site is written like a connected map: each stage has its own section.