jmis-contribution-framing
GitHub用于将研究结果转化为符合JMIS期刊要求的明确学术贡献。聚焦技术与组织经济学的结合,确保理论和管理启示清晰,对齐引言与讨论部分,避免过度宣称,并提供可执行的修改建议。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jmis-contribution-framing -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jmis-contribution-framing",
"description": "Use when turning results into an explicit contribution for a Journal of Management Information Systems (JMIS) manuscript — an advance to an IS-management\/economics conversation with theoretical and managerial implications. Frames the contribution and aligns intro\/discussion; it does not position the literature (jmis-literature-positioning) or run the submission preflight (jmis-submission)."
}
Contribution Framing (jmis-contribution-framing)
When to trigger
- Results exist but the "so what for IS management" is thin or implicit
- A reviewer or the EIC says the contribution is incremental or reads as a reference-discipline result
- The paper is a competent study with no clear advance to a JMIS conversation
- The introduction's "we show that…" sentences and the discussion's implications do not match
What counts as a JMIS contribution
JMIS rewards a contribution to the technology–organization–economics nexus: a finding that changes what the IS field believes and what a manager, firm, platform, or policymaker should do about technology. Strong JMIS contributions:
- Advance a named IS conversation (IT value, platforms, e-commerce, IS economics, security/privacy, analytics) — not only a reference discipline.
- Make the IT artifact essential to the advance: delete the technology and the contribution collapses.
- Carry a managerial/economic payload. Beyond theory, say what changes for practice — pricing, governance, investment, design, policy. JMIS's identity makes the practical implication first-class, not an afterthought.
- Match the genre's currency. An empirical paper contributes a credibly identified effect and mechanism; an analytical paper contributes a new insight/comparative static; a design-science paper contributes a useful, evaluated artifact and generalizable design knowledge.
Write the contribution as a claim narrower than your evidence
Translate results into three sentences: what we did not know → what we now know → why it matters for IS theory and practice. Then deliberately make the claim narrower than the evidence supports — overclaiming beyond the identification/proof/evaluation is the fastest route to reviewer distrust. Name the alternative explanation you ruled out and the boundary where the effect stops.
Align the introduction and discussion
The contribution must appear explicitly, and consistently, in two places: the introduction ("we show that…", stated for an IS reader) and the discussion, which revisits it with implications for IS theory, for managers/firms/platforms, and — where apt — for policy, plus honest boundary conditions and future work. Do not leave the contribution for the reader to reconstruct from the results section.
Decision ledger to hand to the next pass
Return rows of claim / evidence / blocker / next edit so the manuscript can be patched directly. If the contribution depends on a fact that is volatile (a process rule, a fee), reopen resources/official-source-map.md and name the one unresolved item.
Worked vignette: narrowing the claim to fit the evidence (illustrative)
A results section supports: "the recommender redesign reduced marginal-seller retention on this marketplace over 2023–24." The discussion, though, claims "personalized ranking harms platform ecosystems." That overclaim invites a reviewer to list every boundary the paper did not test (other platforms, other periods, buyer-side gains). The JMIS-grade contribution states the narrower true claim, names what it does not establish (welfare, generalization across platform types), and converts the boundary into a managerial nuance: aggressive personalization trades short-run match quality against long-run seller supply, so the optimal intensity depends on how supply-constrained the platform is. Narrower claim, stronger paper, clearer practice implication.
Referee pushback mapped to a framing fix
- "Contribution is unclear / incremental." → Lead with the three-sentence didn't-know → now-know → why-it-matters and name the exact IS belief you move.
- "This is an economics finding, not an IS one." → Make the IT artifact essential and the implication actionable for an IS decision-maker.
- "You overclaim." → State the narrower claim, name ruled-out alternatives and boundaries, and align the intro and discussion to it.
Checklist
- A three-sentence contribution (didn't know → now know → why it matters) is drafted
- The advance is to a named IS conversation, not only a reference discipline
- The IT artifact is essential to the contribution
- A concrete managerial/economic implication is stated (not generic "implications for practice")
- The claim is narrower than the evidence; ruled-out alternatives and boundaries are named
- Intro "we show that…" and discussion implications state the same contribution
- The contribution verb matches the genre (identify / insight / evaluated artifact)
- Both a theoretical and a managerial/economic payload are named and reinforce each other
Make the dual contribution explicit
JMIS prizes work that contributes to both IS theory and IS practice, and the journal's management identity means the practical side is not optional. State the theoretical contribution (what the IS field now believes) and the managerial/economic contribution (what a firm, platform, CIO, or policymaker should do) as two distinct, named payloads — not one blurred "implications" paragraph. The two should reinforce each other: the mechanism you theorized is why the managerial advice holds, and the managerial advice is the stakes that make the mechanism worth knowing. A paper that nails the theory but offers only generic practice advice, or vice versa, reads as half a JMIS contribution.
Anti-patterns
- A reference-discipline contribution (pure econ/marketing/CS finding) with no IS advance
- "Implications for practice" as a throwaway paragraph with nothing actionable
- An implicit contribution the reader must infer from tables
- Overclaiming a causal or general effect the design cannot support
- A contribution sentence in the intro that the discussion silently contradicts
- Claiming a contribution whose verb mismatches the genre (e.g., "we propose a construct" for an empirical paper)
- A theory contribution with only generic practice advice, or strong practice with no theory — half a JMIS contribution
- A contribution that depends on a volatile process fact left unverified against the source map
Calibrate the contribution to the genre's currency
The same result earns credit differently depending on the paper's genre, and overclaiming the wrong kind of contribution invites pushback. An empirical paper's currency is a credibly identified effect plus the mechanism behind it — its contribution sentence should foreground "we identify" and "the mechanism is," not "we propose a new construct." An analytical paper's currency is a non-obvious insight or comparative static — claim the surprising result, not the existence of a model. A design-science / data-science paper's currency is an evaluated, useful artifact and the generalizable design knowledge it embodies — claim utility against credible baselines and the transferable principle, not raw accuracy. Match the verb to the genre and the contribution lands; mismatch it and a referee will say the paper "claims more than its genre delivers."
Test the contribution against the EIC's fit gate
Before handing off to exhibits and prose, read the contribution as the EIC will at intake: is this an advance to an IS-management/economics conversation, or a reference-discipline result with an IS setting? If a sharp colleague could say "this is really an economics/CS/marketing paper," the framing has not yet earned its place at JMIS. Strengthen the IS-artifact dependence and the managerial payload until the contribution is unambiguously an IS contribution — that is the single most common reason a competent paper is returned.
Output format
【Contribution (3 sentences)】didn't know → now know → why it matters
【IS conversation advanced】[stream]
【IT-artifact dependence】why the technology is essential
【Managerial/economic payload】concrete action that changes
【Claim vs. evidence】narrower? alternative ruled out? boundary stated?
【Decision ledger】claim / evidence / blocker / next edit rows
【Next step】jmis-tables-figures
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:46


