From amj-skills
Frames empirical results into an explicit theoretical contribution for AMJ manuscripts, crafting the discussion section around mechanism, boundary, or integration claims.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/amj-skills:amj-contribution-framingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Results are in but the "so what for theory" is vague or missing
AMJ evaluates every paper on three criteria: a strong empirical contribution, a meaningful theoretical contribution, and practical relevance. The empirical contribution must be paired with a theoretical one: what do we now understand about the theory that we did not before? — and the discussion must also speak to why it matters for management practice. A clear, defensible theoretical answer is essential; strong results with no theoretical advance read as a technical report, not an AMJ paper. AMJ's From the Editors tradition frames this as the "so what?" and "who cares?" tests.
| Contribution type | What it does |
|---|---|
| Reveal a new mechanism | Explains why an established effect occurs |
| Establish a boundary | Shows when an effect holds, weakens, or reverses |
| Adjudicate competing theories | Shows which of two rival predictions holds, and why |
| Integrate / bridge | Connects two literatures into a more general account |
| Challenge an assumption | Overturns a taken-for-granted premise (problematization) |
| Introduce/refine a construct | Conceptualizes and validates a new construct that earns its keep |
State explicitly which type(s) you claim; do not gesture vaguely at "contributing to the literature."
A strong AMJ discussion typically:
Match the discussion to the front end: the contributions you claim here must be the ones you promised in the introduction. A reviewer will check that the intro's promise and the discussion's delivery line up.
Draft 2–4 explicit contribution sentences and place a version in the introduction and the discussion. Each should be of the form: "We contribute to [literature] by showing [mechanism/boundary/integration], which advances [theory] because [reason]."
【Contribution type(s)】mechanism / boundary / adjudication / integration / assumption / construct
【Contribution sentences】1–4, intro + discussion aligned
【Theoretical implications】per literature: what changes and why ...
【Practical implications】specific, grounded ...
【Limitations → boundaries】...
【Future research】concrete, mechanism-tied ...
【Intro↔discussion consistency】yes/no
【Next step】amj-tables-figures, then amj-writing-style
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin amj-skillsFrames the theoretical contribution of an AMR manuscript by differentiating what is new vs. prior theory and explaining why it matters.
Sharpens the one-sentence theoretical contribution and practical implications for JMS manuscripts when the 'so what' is the bottleneck.
Frames empirical results into a theoretical contribution for JOM manuscripts, focusing on the 'what new theory do we learn?' statement and discussion section.