finman-referee-strategy
GitHub模拟金融管理审稿人视角,在提交前预判并防御四类致命异议(缺乏兴趣、领域不符、识别不可信、无实际意义),优化论文框架与投稿信,提升录用率。
触发场景
安装
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill finman-referee-strategy -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "finman-referee-strategy",
"description": "Use when pre-empting the objections a Financial Management (FM) referee is likely to raise, before pressing submit — red-teaming the paper from the perspective of an applied-finance reviewer who weighs relevance, rigor, and the \"so-what.\" Anticipates pushback; it does not run the submission preflight (finman-submission) or draft a response to an actual report (finman-rebuttal)."
}
Referee Strategy (finman-referee-strategy)
When to trigger
- The paper feels finished and you want to find the holes before a referee does
- You suspect a reviewer will call it "incremental," "a specialist paper," or "rigorous but not interesting"
- The identification or sample has a known soft spot you have not yet addressed in the text
- You want to write a cover letter that frames the contribution and pre-empts the obvious objections
How FM referees read a paper
An FM referee is an applied-finance academic evaluating against the journal's five criteria — originality, rigor, timeliness, practical relevance, quality — and against the brand of papers "people actually read." With 300+ submissions a year and a sub-10% acceptance rate, the default disposition is rejection, and the fastest paths to it are: not interesting enough for a general audience, belongs in a specialist journal, identification not credible, or no clear so-what. Notably, because FM under-weights trivial robustness, "you didn't run check X" is rarely fatal unless X addresses a real alternative explanation — so do not over-insure against busywork objections; insure against the four that actually sink papers here. The editors aim for a median 6–8 week turnaround, so reports tend to be focused; a paper that telegraphs its contribution and pre-empts the live concerns reads as ready.
Red-team the four FM-fatal objections
| Likely objection | Pre-empt it by |
|---|---|
| "Not interesting / too narrow for a general audience" | sharpen the general-interest framing and the debate it furthers (finman-topic-selection, finman-writing-style) |
| "This belongs in JCF / JFQA / JBF" | answer the substitution question inside the intro (finman-literature-positioning) |
| "Identification is not credible" | show the design, leads, and the one check that defuses the leading alternative (finman-identification, finman-robustness) |
| "No clear practical implication" | state an explicit managerial/market so-what with the economic magnitude (finman-writing-style) |
The cover letter as a framing instrument
At FM the cover letter does targeted work: it is the editor's first read on fit and interest, before any referee. Keep it short and make it earn its place:
- One paragraph on the contribution and the general-interest hook — what the paper shows and why a broad finance audience cares.
- One sentence pre-empting the substitution question — why FM rather than a specialist sibling.
- Honest scope — do not oversell to frontier-defining; FM editors discount inflated cover letters fast.
- Logistics — confirm exclusivity (not under review elsewhere) and any disclosures. A cover letter that argues with imagined referees, rather than framing the value, signals defensiveness before the paper is even read.
Building the defense before submission
- Write the three reports a hostile referee would write. Force yourself to articulate the strongest version of each fatal objection; weak self-critique misses the real holes.
- Fix what is cheap and decisive in the paper now — a flat pre-trend plot, an Oster bound, a magnitude statement — rather than promising it in a cover letter.
- Pre-empt in the text, not the cover letter. Address the substitution and credibility concerns where the referee reads, so they never become a report.
- Use the cover letter to frame, not to plead. State the contribution, the general-interest hook, and (if relevant) why FM over a sibling — briefly. (Whether review is single- or double-blind, and how to anonymize, is 待核实 — confirm in the Wiley/FMA guidelines before naming yourself in the cover materials.)
- Suggest appropriate reviewers honestly. If the system invites suggestions, name scholars who span FM's general-interest breadth, not just your subfield allies.
Checklist
- The four FM-fatal objections are each written out as a hostile referee would
- The "too narrow / not interesting" objection is pre-empted in the framing
- The substitution objection ("belongs in a specialist journal") is answered in the intro
- The credibility objection is met with the design plus the one decisive check
- An explicit practical implication with economic magnitude is present
- Cheap, decisive fixes are in the paper, not deferred to the cover letter
- Blinding/anonymization requirements verified or marked 待核实
Anti-patterns
- Over-insuring against trivial-robustness objections FM does not weight, while leaving a fatal one open
- A defensive cover letter that argues with objections instead of pre-empting them in the text
- Assuming the referee shares your subfield context — they read as a general finance reviewer
- Suggesting only friendly, narrow reviewers from your immediate niche
- Naming yourself in cover materials before confirming the blinding model
What FM's fast process implies for strategy
FM advertises a median 6–8 week turnaround including desk rejections, and the editors commit to explanatory feedback on every submission. Two strategic implications:
- Desk-reject risk is real and quick. A paper that does not pass the interest/fit screen on the first page can be returned in days. Front-load the contribution and the general-interest hook so a co-editor skimming the intro sees the value immediately.
- Reports are focused, not exhaustive. A short, fast review tends to zero in on the one or two things that would sink the paper. Pre-empting the four fatal objections matters more than covering every conceivable minor point — and means you should not pad the paper trying to anticipate trivial requests.
- Feedback even on rejection is usable. If desk-rejected, the explanatory note is a free read on whether the problem is fit (re-target) or execution (revise) before you spend a second fee.
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A near-final paper on bank loan pricing is strong on data but the author worries about robustness coverage. The red-team reveals the real risk is not robustness — it is "this is a banking paper for JBF." The FM move: add a paragraph to the intro showing the information-frictions mechanism generalizes beyond banks, lead the abstract with that general-interest implication, and state the magnitude in basis points a lending officer would recognize. The substitution objection is now defused in the text, and the author wisely does not add three more robustness tables that FM would discount anyway.
Referee pushback mapped to the pre-emption
- "Why is this in FM and not a specialist journal?" → Add the general-interest implication and the substitution answer to the intro before submitting.
- "Rigorous, but I'm not sure it's interesting." → Sharpen the hook and the debate the finding furthers; this is a framing fix, not a robustness fix.
- "The identification doesn't convince me." → Bring the design, the flat pre-trends, and the one decisive check into the main paper.
- "I don't see the practical payoff." → State the managerial/market implication with the economic magnitude in a unit the decision-maker uses.
Output format
【Hostile reports】three strongest objections written out? [Y/N]
【Too-narrow risk】general-interest framing sharpened? [Y/N]
【Substitution risk】"why FM not the sibling" answered in intro? [Y/N]
【Credibility risk】design + one decisive check in place? [Y/N]
【So-what】explicit practical implication + magnitude? [Y/N]
【Blinding】single/double-blind + anonymization verified or 待核实
【Next skill】finman-submission
版本历史
- 1839142 当前 2026-07-05 13:15


