finman-literature-positioning
GitHub针对金融管理(FM)期刊投稿,当稿件贡献模糊或定位不清时使用。该技能旨在明确边际贡献与竞品边界,指导作者根据与JCF、JFQA等邻近期刊的关系调整叙事,避免过度宣称或误投,确保贡献大小适中且具广泛相关性,不执行分析或撰写引言。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill finman-literature-positioning -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "finman-literature-positioning",
"description": "Use when the contribution of a Financial Management (FM) manuscript relative to the published finance frontier is fuzzy, oversold, or indistinguishable from a specialist sibling. Stakes the marginal contribution and the sibling boundary; it does not run analysis or draft the intro prose."
}
Literature Positioning (finman-literature-positioning)
When to trigger
- A referee or coauthor says the contribution "isn't clear" or "feels incremental"
- The paper could plausibly have been sent to JCF, JFQA, or a top-3 journal and you cannot articulate why FM
- The intro cites everything but never says precisely what is new relative to the closest two or three papers
- You are tempted to claim a top-3-sized contribution that the evidence does not support
The FM positioning bar
FM rewards a clearly stated, honestly sized contribution that a general finance reader can grasp. Because the journal is broad and explicitly values papers that "provoke and further debate," positioning at FM is less about claiming you beat the frontier on rigor and more about showing your finding adds a debate-worthy fact, mechanism, or managerial implication the literature is missing. The two failure modes FM editors see most are (a) over-claiming — dressing a solid incremental result as a paradigm shift, which the <10% acceptance bar and experienced AEs catch immediately; and (b) mis-targeting — a paper whose contribution is so specialist it belongs in JCF or JFQA, or so frontier-defining it belongs in JF/JFE/RFS. Your job is to land the contribution in FM's lane: broad relevance, real novelty, sized to the evidence.
Positioning by where the paper sits relative to siblings
| Closest neighbor | Risk | How to position for FM |
|---|---|---|
| Journal of Corporate Finance | reads as a CF-specialist replication | foreground the general-interest implication and the managerial "so-what" a non-CF reader cares about |
| JFQA | reads as a methods/quant-finance contribution | lead with the economic question and finding, demote the technique to a tool |
| Journal of Banking & Finance | reads as a banking-only result | frame the mechanism so it generalizes beyond banks (information, frictions, incentives) |
| Review of Financial Studies / JF / JFE | you are claiming a top-3-sized contribution | size the claim honestly; FM is the right home for a strong, broad, non-frontier-defining result |
Staking the contribution
- Name the two or three closest papers and state, in one sentence each, what they established. Vague "the literature shows" framing hides the marginal contribution.
- State the delta in one sentence: the new fact, the new mechanism, the new identification of a known mechanism, or the resolution of an open disagreement.
- Right-size it. Match the verb to the evidence — "we document," "we identify," "we show," "we reconcile" — not "we overturn" unless you genuinely do.
- Make it general-interest. Translate the delta into why a reader outside the immediate subfield (and a practitioner) should care; this is what separates FM positioning from specialist positioning.
- Pre-empt the substitution question. Answer the editor's silent "why not the specialist journal?" inside the intro, not in the cover letter.
Sizing the claim: match the verb to the evidence
FM's experienced AEs read the contribution verb as a promise and check it against the design. Pick the verb honestly:
| Verb | Justified when | Over-claim risk |
|---|---|---|
| "we document / we provide the first evidence" | a genuinely new fact, cleanly measured | low — but say why the fact matters |
| "we identify / we show a channel" | a credible design isolates a mechanism | medium — needs intermediate-variable evidence |
| "we reconcile / we resolve" | you settle a real disagreement in the literature | medium — both sides must be fairly stated |
| "we overturn / we refute" | strong design contradicts an established result | high — FM AEs scrutinize this hardest |
| "we extend / we add controls to" | — | this verb usually fails the originality gate at FM |
The last row is the trap: "extend" framing reads as incremental and invites the "belongs in a specialist outlet" rejection.
Checklist
- The two or three closest papers are named, with what each established stated plainly
- The marginal contribution is one crisp sentence, not a paragraph of hedges
- The claim verb matches the evidence (no "overturn" on an incremental result)
- No "we extend / we add controls" framing standing in for a real contribution
- The general-interest implication is explicit (why a non-specialist / practitioner cares)
- The intro answers "why FM and not the specialist sibling / a top-3" without the cover letter
- No citation padding: every cited paper is load-bearing for the contribution claim
Anti-patterns
- Over-claiming a frontier-defining contribution the design cannot support (caught fast at FM)
- A "gap-spotting" intro that lists what others did without stating your specific delta
- Positioning that only a subfield insider can parse — fails FM's general-interest test
- Citing 40 papers to look thorough while the closest three are never directly contrasted
- Leaving "why FM?" implicit and hoping the editor infers it
The "why FM" paragraph (write it before you submit)
FM's general-interest identity means every paper should contain, somewhere in the intro, an implicit answer to "why this journal?" Draft it explicitly even if you fold it into prose:
- The upward boundary: state honestly why the contribution is strong-but-not-frontier-defining, so it does not read as a rejected top-3 paper looking for a home. FM is a destination, not a consolation.
- The downward boundary: state why a general finance reader (not just the subfield) gains from the result, so it does not read as a specialist paper mis-filed.
- The relevance bridge: name the practitioner or policy decision the finding informs. A paper that can articulate all three sits squarely in FM's lane; one that cannot will draw a "wrong venue" report regardless of quality.
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A draft on creditor control after covenant violations cites a long list and concludes "we contribute to the covenant literature." A referee calls it indistinguishable from a JBF paper. The FM repositioning: name the two closest covenant papers, state the delta in one sentence ("prior work shows control shifts; we show it shifts investment in a way boards can anticipate"), size it as "we identify a channel" not "we overturn," and translate it into the managerial payoff — what a CFO negotiating covenants should expect. The contribution is now broad, novel, honestly sized, and visibly FM rather than JBF.
Output format
【Journal】Financial Management
【Closest papers】[2–3 named, with what each established]
【Marginal contribution】one sentence (new fact / mechanism / identification / reconciliation)
【Claim sizing】verb matched to evidence? [Y/N]
【General-interest payoff】why a non-specialist / practitioner cares
【Why FM not the sibling】[JCF / JFQA / JBF / top-3 distinction]
【Next skill】finman-identification
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:15


