jms-contribution-framing
GitHub针对JMS论文贡献阐述瓶颈,提炼核心理论贡献句并校准其规模。通过结构化模板区分发现与贡献,避免夸大或弱化,确保实践启示由理论自然推导,提升论文的学术影响力与清晰度。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jms-contribution-framing -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jms-contribution-framing",
"description": "Use when the \"so what for management theory and practice\" is the bottleneck for a Journal of Management Studies (JMS) manuscript — sharpening the one-sentence contribution and the implications. Crystallises the claim; it does not build the theory (jms-theory-development) or position against the literature (jms-literature-positioning)."
}
Contribution Framing (jms-contribution-framing)
When to trigger
- A reviewer or coauthor asks "what exactly does this contribute to theory?"
- The discussion section restates results instead of stating what changed in the conversation
- The paper has findings but no crisp one-sentence claim
- Practical implications are an afterthought ("managers should be aware…") rather than earned
- The contribution is over-claimed (grand) or under-claimed (buried, hedged)
The JMS contribution bar
A JMS paper must articulate a theoretical contribution that engages an organizational phenomenon and says what it changes — its house phrasing is the "so what for management theory and practice." Two things are non-negotiable: the contribution is to a theory/conversation (not just "we found an effect"), and it is commensurate with the evidence (neither inflated nor hidden). Because JMS is pluralist, the contribution can be a refined construct, a process model, a boundary condition, a reconciliation, or a challenge to orthodoxy — but it must be nameable in one sentence.
Build the contribution claim
State it in this shape and pressure-test each slot:
"We contribute to [named conversation] by showing [specific theoretical insight], which revises/extends/reconciles [prior understanding] under [scope conditions]."
- Named conversation — must match what
jms-literature-positioningstaked. - Specific insight — a mechanism, construct, model, or condition, not a restated finding ("trust mediates" is a finding; "trust substitutes for formal control only when ties are multiplex" is a contribution).
- What it revises — the prior belief your work changes; if nothing changes, there is no contribution.
- Scope conditions — where the claim holds and where it does not; bounding a claim strengthens it at JMS.
Calibrate the size of the claim
| Failure | Symptom | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Over-claim | "Transforms how we understand strategy" from one study | Bound to the conversation and scope; let reviewers infer reach |
| Under-claim | The contribution is a sub-clause in paragraph 4 of the discussion | Lead the intro and discussion with it; one clear sentence |
| Finding-as-contribution | "We found X is significant" as the contribution | Translate the finding into what it changes theoretically |
| Contribution sprawl | Five contributions, each thin | Keep one or two strong, integrated contributions |
Earn the practice implication
JMS values practical relevance, but it must be derived from the theory, not bolted on. Ask: given the mechanism, what should a specific decision-maker do differently, and under what condition? Generic "managers should pay attention to X" is not an implication — name the actor, the decision, and the contingency.
Checklist
- The contribution is stated in one sentence using the named conversation
- It is a theoretical insight (mechanism/construct/model/condition), not a restated finding
- It names what prior understanding it revises/extends/reconciles
- Scope conditions are stated (where it holds / does not)
- The claim is commensurate with the evidence — not inflated, not buried
- One or two integrated contributions, not a sprawl of thin ones
- The practice implication names an actor, a decision, and a contingency
Anti-patterns
- Finding dressed as contribution: "we showed a significant effect" with no theoretical translation
- Grand-claim inflation: cosmic significance unsupported by a single study's evidence
- Buried contribution: the "so what" hidden in the discussion instead of leading the intro
- Contribution sprawl: a bullet list of five weak contributions instead of one strong one
- Bolt-on practice section: generic managerial advice not derived from the mechanism
- Conversation drift: the framed contribution targets a different conversation than the positioning
Output format
【Conversation】named conversation (must match positioning)
【Contribution sentence】"we contribute to … by showing …, revising … under …"
【Type】mechanism / construct / process model / boundary condition / reconciliation / challenge
【Scope conditions】where it holds / does not
【Size check】over-claim? under-claim? finding-as-contribution? → fix
【Practice implication】actor + decision + contingency
【Next step】jms-tables-figures, then jms-writing-style
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:47


