From amj-skills
Polishes full-manuscript prose for Academy of Management Journal submissions: front-loads arguments, enforces active voice, and applies AOM house style.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/amj-skills:amj-writing-styleThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The argument is buried under jargon, hedging, or passive constructions
AMJ values prose that is rigorous yet readable: the theoretical argument should be visible to a reader from another division. Front-load the point — say what you argue, then support it. Write in the active voice with human/organizational actors as subjects. Hedge precisely (state what the data show), not defensively (avoid stacking "may possibly suggest"). AMJ's From the Editors (FTE) series has devoted whole editorials to storytelling and crafting the introduction — the journal genuinely rewards a paper that "tells a story," so treat narrative arc as a substantive standard, not decoration.
Standard full structure: Introduction → Theory & Hypotheses → Methods → Results → Discussion. Each section earns its place:
【Intro clarity】contribution visible on page 1? yes/no
【Voice】active-voice dominant? flagged passives: [...]
【Topic sentences】claim-first throughout? exceptions: [...]
【Terminology】construct names consistent? drift: [...]
【Structure/signposting】arc intact? gaps: [...]
【House style】AOM/APA citations & headings: pass/fix
【Length】main body vs. 40-page limit (refs+appendices incl.): ok/trim
【Next step】amj-submission
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin amj-skillsPolishes prose and structure of Academy of Management Review manuscripts to AOM house style and argument-driven voice. Use for late-stage polish after theory and logic are settled.
Polishes prose and structure for Journal of Management Studies manuscripts: landing abstracts and intros, sustaining theory-forward narratives, and enforcing Harvard refs, UK/US English, and 200-word abstracts.
Polishes prose for Journal of Marketing manuscripts: front-loads arguments, writes for general scholarly-managerial audience, enforces AMA author-date style and formatting.