From jfe-skills
Polishes JFE manuscript prose to be precise, evidence-forward, and free of hedging or overclaiming. Improves introduction structure and sentence discipline.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jfe-skills:jfe-writing-styleThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The introduction hedges or buries the contribution
JFE prose is precise, restrained, and evidence-forward. Because JFE papers are technical and long, clarity is what keeps a referee on your side: every claim is calibrated to the evidence, magnitudes are stated, and the contribution is unmissable in the first page. Overclaiming is punished harder than modest framing. The famous JFE papers — Jensen & Meckling (1976) and Fama & French (1993) — are remembered partly because their central idea is stated plainly and early; write to that standard.
Two hard format facts to write toward (verify on jfinec.com): the abstract must be 100 words or fewer, so it has to carry the question, design, headline result, and significance with zero padding; and the manuscript is double-spaced, 12-pt+, author-date references, which rewards short, declarative sentences over dense clauses.
A JFE-style introduction usually does, in order:
Lead with results, not with a literature tour.
【Intro order】question/what/finding/credibility/contribution present? yes/no
【Overclaim scan】flagged verbs/sentences: [...]
【Magnitudes stated】yes/no
【Voice】active-dominant? yes/no
【Contribution visible on p.1】yes/no
【Next】jfe-submission
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jfe-skillsPolishes Journal of Finance manuscripts for general-interest exposition, tightening introductions and trimming hedging for the broad AFA readership.
Polishes prose, abstracts, and introductions for QJE manuscripts so the big idea lands fast for a general-interest reader. Reflects QJE's house style.
Polishes JEP article prose to be engaging, clear, and authoritative-but-readable. Revises sentence-level voice, abstracts, and openings—active voice, plain language, minimal notation.