From jcf-skills
Positions a manuscript within the Journal of Corporate Finance literature by identifying the corporate-finance strand (capital structure, governance, payout, etc.) and stating the marginal contribution against the closest papers.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jcf-skills:jcf-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Writing the related-literature paragraphs and the "we contribute by…" sentence
JCF readers expect a paper to sit inside a recognizable corporate-finance conversation, not a generic finance one. Identify the precise strand:
Then state the marginal contribution against the closest two or three papers, not a wall of citations.
For each close paper, write:
[Paper] studies [decision/friction] using [setting/design]. We differ by [variation/data/model] and show
[mechanism or magnitude] for [corporate-finance outcome].
This prevents vague "we add to" claims. JCF positioning should tell the editor why the marginal result changes a corporate-finance conversation, not simply why the dataset or period is newer.
Strand | Benchmark conversation | What positioning must show
Capital structure | Trade-off vs. pecking order; debt dynamics | Which theory the new variation discriminates
Governance | Boards, ownership, monitoring channels | Whose incentive changed and how you observe it
Payout | Dividends vs. repurchases; signaling/taxes | Composition vs. level; clientele implications
Financial contracting | Covenants, syndication, security design | The contracting friction the data isolates
M&A / restructuring | Synergies, agency, market for control | Why this deal variation separates the stories
ESG / CSR | Values vs. value; greenwashing debates | A firm decision, not an ESG-score correlation
Entrepreneurial finance | VC contracts, staging, exit | Selection vs. treatment in investor effects
International | Investor protection, law and finance | Institutional variation doing identifying work
Name the row, then position inside it; papers that straddle rows without choosing read as unfocused at the desk screen.
Hypothetical: a paper finds firms entering a sustainability index cut dividends. Weak positioning: "We add to the ESG literature and the payout literature." JCF-ready positioning names the row (payout, with an ESG instrument), the two closest papers (one on index-inclusion effects on governance, one on ESG and investment), and the wedge: prior work shows index entry changes ownership composition; this paper shows the new clientele tolerates lower dividends — an illustrative 0.4-percentage-point-of-earnings cut concentrated in firms with the largest institutional-entry. The gap sentence: clientele effects on payout composition were asserted in the dividend literature but never tied to a quasi-random ownership shock.
【Strand】<capital structure / governance / …>
【Closest work】<2–3 cites> — differentiation: <one line each>
【Gap】<one sentence> 【Contribution】<one sentence>
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jcf-skillsPositions a Journal of Banking & Finance manuscript against banking, intermediation, corporate finance, investments, regulation, and capital-market literatures to state a precise contribution.
Builds a sharp positioning argument for JFE manuscripts whose related-work section reads as a list and lacks clear marginal contribution relative to the top-3 finance frontier.
Positions a Journal of Finance manuscript by writing a crisp contribution paragraph that names the closest papers and states the specific delta. Use when the related-work section is a chronological list or the intro fails to state what is new.