jmgmt-literature-positioning
GitHub针对JOM稿件,通过聚焦核心对话、运用问题化策略及与AMJ/SMJ等期刊差异化定位,解决贡献度不足或被指增量化的瓶颈,明确研究缺口。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jmgmt-literature-positioning -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jmgmt-literature-positioning",
"description": "Use when the contribution-relative-to-prior-work is the bottleneck for a Journal of Management (JOM) manuscript — staking the gap against the right conversation and against sibling journals (AMJ, SMJ, JMS, Org Science). Positions the paper; it does not build the theory (jmgmt-theory-development) or write the discussion (jmgmt-contribution-framing)."
}
Literature Positioning (jmgmt-literature-positioning)
When to trigger
- The intro reviews the literature but never names the gap it closes
- A reviewer says the contribution is "incremental" or "we already knew this"
- The paper could be read as a near-duplicate of a recent JOM/AMJ piece
- You cite broadly but cannot say which conversation you are joining
- For a review/meta-analysis: you cannot say why a synthesis is needed now
Positioning to the right conversation
JOM is a general-management journal, so the trap is positioning against everything and contributing to nothing. Pick the focal conversation — the specific stream (e.g., the abusive-supervision literature, the dynamic-capabilities debate, the entrepreneurial-orientation–performance relationship) — and stake the gap there. The strongest JOM intros use a problematization move: surface an assumption the literature takes for granted, show it is questionable, and position the paper as resolving the tension. A "gap-spotting" move ("no one has studied X in setting Y") is weaker and reads as incremental.
Differentiating from the siblings (in the text)
Reviewers will be drawn from JOM's neighbors and will ask "why not there?" Pre-empt it in how you frame the contribution:
| Sibling | What they own | How to position JOM-ward |
|---|---|---|
| AMJ | AOM empirical flagship; same theory-contribution bar | Lean on JOM's appetite for synthesis/methods breadth; if it's a review/meta-analysis, that's a JOM strength |
| SMJ | strategy, competitive advantage, firm performance | If the DV is firm performance only, justify the management-theory (not pure-strategy) contribution |
| JMS (Wiley/EU) | pluralist, qualitative/critical/process-friendly | A hypothetico-deductive or meta-analytic paper fits JOM's quantitative center better |
| Org Science | novel organization theory, methodological novelty | JOM rewards a clean, well-identified test of established/extended theory |
The meta-analysis / review positioning move
A JOM meta-analysis must justify its timing: enough primary studies, and an unresolved theoretical dispute the pooled evidence can settle. A review must show the literature is fragmented or contradictory enough that an integrative framework adds value. In both, position against prior reviews/meta-analyses explicitly — what did they miss, and what new theory or moderators do you add?
From positioning to contribution sentences
Convert the gap into 2–4 explicit sentences of the form: "We contribute to [focal conversation] by showing [mechanism / boundary / integration / adjudication], which changes [theory] because [reason]." These must reappear, unchanged in substance, in the discussion (jmgmt-contribution-framing).
Worked example (illustrative)
A paper on remote-work and employee proactivity could be gap-spotted ("few studies examine proactivity in remote settings") — weak, and a reviewer will read it as a setting swap. A problematized version: the literature assumes visibility drives proactive recognition, so remote work should suppress proactivity; but if proactivity is self-initiated and digitally traced, remote settings may amplify it. Now the paper resolves a tension in the conservation-of-resources/proactivity literature, travels to HR and OB at once, and the contribution sentence writes itself: "We contribute to the proactivity literature by showing that digital traceability substitutes for physical visibility, which overturns the assumption that co-location is necessary for proactive recognition." That framing earns a JOM read; the gap-spotted version invites a desk reject.
Positioning a synthesis against prior syntheses
If you are writing a meta-analysis or review, the most important citations are the prior reviews/meta-analyses in the same space. Name them, say what they covered and when, and state precisely what you add: a larger or more recent corpus, theory-mapped moderators they omitted, corrected artifacts they ignored, or a framework that reconciles their contradictions. A synthesis that does not engage its predecessors reads as redundant, however careful the coding.
Citing across subfields without losing focus
JOM's general-management identity means a paper often draws on more than one literature (e.g., an HR paper that borrows a strategy construct). The discipline is to cite into the focal conversation while showing awareness of the others — not to review three literatures in parallel. Anchor the contribution in one stream, acknowledge the adjacent ones in a sentence or two, and make the cross-subfield reach a feature of the contribution (see jmgmt-contribution-framing) rather than a reason the paper feels unfocused. Verify every citation is real and current; a missing recent JOM/AMJ paper in your exact space is the fastest way to look out of touch.
Checklist
- One focal conversation named; the gap stated in plain language
- The move is problematization (challenge an assumption), not bare gap-spotting
- The "why JOM, not AMJ/SMJ/JMS/Org Science" question is pre-empted in the framing
- Recent close cousins (esp. recent JOM/AMJ papers) are cited and differentiated
- (Review/meta) prior reviews/meta-analyses are named and the value-add is explicit
- 2–4 contribution sentences drafted, consistent with the planned discussion
- Citations are real; no invented exemplars (verify DOIs)
Anti-patterns
- Gap by absence: "no one has studied X" with no argument that X matters theoretically
- Positioning against the whole field instead of one conversation
- Ignoring the obvious cousin: a recent near-identical paper the reviewer will know
- Strategy-only framing that belongs at SMJ, not JOM
- Synthesis with no timing argument: a meta-analysis or review that never says why now
- Contribution drift: the intro's promised gap differs from what the discussion delivers
Output format
【Journal】Journal of Management
【Skill】jmgmt-literature-positioning
【Focal conversation】...
【Gap / problematized assumption】...
【Why JOM not sibling】AMJ / SMJ / JMS / Org Science — one reason
【Closest cousins differentiated】refs + how this differs
【Contribution sentences】1–4 (intro = discussion)
【Source status】verified DOIs / 待核实
【Next skill】jmgmt-methods
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:47


