From jbv-skills
Positions a JBV manuscript in the entrepreneurship literature: joins a live conversation, problematizes assumptions, and engages across economics/psychology/sociology. Use when introduction is gap-spotting or reviewers cite missing canonical context.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jbv-skills:jbv-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Your introduction reads as "X is understudied in entrepreneurship" (gap-spotting)
At an FT50 entrepreneurship flagship, "no one has studied this" is a weak motivation. Instead:
Because manuscripts route through a domain-specific area-editor structure, your positioning signals which domain should handle the paper. Make the home conversation unmistakable in the first two pages so the paper routes to a sympathetic, expert editor and reviewers.
A study of equity crowdfunding has a draft intro that opens "equity crowdfunding is understudied." Reframing:
Treat this skill as an executable review pass, not a prose hint. First lock the entrepreneurial mechanism, level of analysis, evidence design, and boundary conditions for ventures; then judge whether the current manuscript answers the venue's real reader: entrepreneurship reviewers who ask whether the paper advances venture formation, opportunity, founder, or ecosystem theory.
claim / evidence / risk / manuscript location rows, so the next agent can edit rather than rediscover the issue.resources/official-source-map.md has been checked for volatile rules and the manuscript has one concrete fix for the largest venue-specific risk.【Conversation joined】the entrepreneurship debate, named ...
【Assumption problematized】...
【Disciplines engaged】econ / psych / sociology ...
【Closest papers + delta】[A] assumed ...; we show ...
【Field-editor signal】home domain for routing ...
【Next step】jbv-methods or jbv-contribution-framing
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jbv-skillsPositions your ETP manuscript by naming the entrepreneurship conversation and your move within it, defending against desk-reject signals like 'incremental' or 'already known'.
Evaluates whether a manuscript fits the Journal of Business Venturing (JBV), the flagship entrepreneurship journal focused on new-venture creation and the entrepreneurial process. Encodes JBV's scope, method-and-evidence bar, house style, and desk-reject heuristics.
Routes to the appropriate jbv-* sub-skill for Journal of Business Venturing manuscript workflow, from topic selection through rebuttal. Invoke when unsure what to do next.