From jams-skills
Builds the conceptual framework and nomological network for a JAMS marketing manuscript: derives hypotheses from theory, specifies mediators and moderators, and carries logic to managerial implications.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jams-skills:jams-theory-developmentThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The question is set but the conceptual framework that generates the hypotheses is thin
JAMS papers are expected to develop theory, not merely apply it. The house archetype is the conceptual framework with a nomological network — antecedents → focal construct(s) → consequences, with mediators that name the process and moderators that name the contingencies. Marketing reviewers want to see the framework drawn (a conceptual model figure) and defended construct by construct, each path justified by a stated theoretical logic, not by a citation alone.
JAMS draws on the field's standard theoretical lenses — resource-based view and dynamic capabilities (strategy), relationship-marketing / commitment–trust and transaction-cost / governance (B2B and channels), service-dominant logic and SERVQUAL-tradition gaps models (services), signaling and brand-equity theory (branding), diffusion and the marketing–finance interface (innovation, firm value), and consumer information-processing and self-construal theories (behavior). Pick the lens the phenomenon actually demands and use it to derive predictions, not to decorate them.
JAMS reviewers read hypotheses closely, so write them to do real theoretical work:
JAMS also publishes purely conceptual / framework articles, and the bar is higher than a literature review:
Many measurement problems are really theory problems, so catch them now: a construct that cannot be defined distinctly from a neighbor will fail discriminant validity later; a construct defined so broadly that it absorbs its own antecedents creates tautology; and a mediator that is conceptually the same as the outcome cannot carry a mechanism. Before handing off to jams-methods, confirm each construct has a single, bounded definition, that no two constructs overlap conceptually, and that mediator, predictor, and outcome are genuinely distinct ideas — not three labels for the same thing.
【Theoretical lens】RBV / commitment-trust / S-D logic / signaling / diffusion / consumer IP / ...
【Focal constructs (defined)】[...]
【Conceptual model】antecedents → focal → consequences; figure drawn? yes/no
【Mechanism (mediator)】X → M → Y: [...]
【Boundary conditions (moderators)】[...] + why they matter theoretically
【Route】theory-first / empirics-first (declared)
【Managerial implication derived】if mechanism holds → manager should [...]
【Next skill】jams-literature-positioning
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jams-skillsGuides building conceptual logic for Journal of Marketing manuscripts — grounding theory in a marketing phenomenon, deriving predictions, and accommodating empirics-first routes.
Guides building the conceptual core of a JMR manuscript: behavioral hypotheses with tested mechanisms or structural/econometric model primitives and identification. Avoids managerial framing.
Builds theoretical arguments for Journal of Management manuscripts: constructs, mechanisms, boundary conditions, and a priori hypotheses. Use when theory is the bottleneck.