From human-resource-management-skills
Frames dual contribution (scholarly advance + practice payoff) for HRM journal manuscripts. Use when claim is not sharp or missing practice implication.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/human-resource-management-skills:hrm-contribution-framingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You cannot state in one sentence what the field now knows that it didn't
Human Resource Management states plainly that submissions must advance the academic literature (theoretically, empirically, and/or methodologically) AND have practical significance — clear implications for workforce policy or HRM practice. Most desk rejections at HRM trace to one of two failures: a rigorous paper with no realistic practice payoff, or a relevant paper with no scholarly advance. The framing task is to make both halves undeniable, in the abstract and the first two pages.
Write the contribution as two linked sentences:
| Question | If you can't answer → fix |
|---|---|
| What does the field now know that it didn't? | Sharpen the scholarly advance; pick one contribution verb |
| Whose HR decision changes, and how? | Add the practice payoff with a named decision-maker |
| Is the effect big or conditional enough to act on? | Translate the result into a practitioner magnitude |
| Could a reviewer call this incremental? | Show the wrong conclusion the field would draw without you |
| Is the takeaway in the abstract? | Move both halves up front; do not bury them in the discussion |
HRM referees know a boilerplate "managers should pay attention to X" paragraph when they see one. A strong payoff is specific, conditional, and tied to your evidence: which practice, for whom, at what cost, under what conditions, with what expected return. If your result says HPWS helps only when line managers actually enact it, the payoff is about implementation, not adoption — say that. If the effect reverses for a subgroup, the honest payoff includes the caution.
【Journal】Human Resource Management (Wiley "HRM")
【Skill】hrm-contribution-framing
【Scholarly advance (1 sentence)】type: theoretical/empirical/methodological — what the field now knows
【Practice payoff (1 sentence)】decision-maker + decision changed + condition
【Practitioner magnitude】the actionable number
【Incremental-proofing】wrong conclusion avoided because of this paper
【Placement】both halves in abstract + intro? yes/no
【Next skill】hrm-tables-figures
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin human-resource-management-skillsFrames the theoretical contribution and 'so what' for Human Relations manuscripts once results exist. Helps sharpen intro/discussion and respond to reviewer feedback.
Polishes HRM/OB manuscript prose, abstracts, and introductions for the dual-audience (scholar + practitioner) voice. Use when the contribution or practitioner takeaway is unclear.
Sharpens the one-sentence theoretical contribution and practical implications for JMS manuscripts when the 'so what' is the bottleneck.