From human-resource-management-skills
Polishes HRM/OB manuscript prose, abstracts, and introductions for the dual-audience (scholar + practitioner) voice. Use when the contribution or practitioner takeaway is unclear.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/human-resource-management-skills:hrm-writing-styleThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The abstract states what you did but not what the field (and HR leaders) now know
HRM is read by scholars and by reflective practitioners, and the journal demands both a scholarly advance and a practice payoff. The prose must therefore do two things at once: be theoretically precise (named mechanisms, defined constructs, careful causal language) and accessible (a reader can extract what to do without decoding jargon). Write for an intelligent HR scholar who is not a specialist in your exact niche — and remember the EIC screens for fit and relevance, so the contribution must be legible on page one.
Pack four things into ~150–200 words (confirm the current limit on the author page; 检索于 2026-06;以官网为准): the question, the design (sample, level, method), the key finding with a magnitude, and the dual contribution. An abstract that omits the practice payoff signals the wrong journal to the screening editor.
【Journal】Human Resource Management (Wiley "HRM")
【Skill】hrm-writing-style
【Abstract】question + design + finding/magnitude + dual contribution? [Y/N]
【Contribution placement】both halves on p.1–2? [Y/N]
【Construct discipline】one label per construct? [Y/N]
【Causal language】matches identification? [Y/N]
【Practice paragraph】specific & conditional (not boilerplate)? [Y/N]
【Next skill】hrm-submission
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin human-resource-management-skillsPolishes academic prose for Human Relations journal manuscripts, refining narrative craft and register without altering theory or analysis.
Frames dual contribution (scholarly advance + practice payoff) for HRM journal manuscripts. Use when claim is not sharp or missing practice implication.
Polishes Journal of Human Resources manuscripts: compresses abstracts, translates coefficients into policy units, reconciles with prior estimates, and enforces the 40-page limit.