From jm-skills
Guides building conceptual logic for Journal of Marketing manuscripts — grounding theory in a marketing phenomenon, deriving predictions, and accommodating empirics-first routes.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jm-skills:jm-theory-developmentThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The phenomenon and question are set; you need a defensible conceptual argument
Unlike theory-first flagships, JM does not reward theoretical machinery for its own sake. Its bar is substantive insight into a real marketing question. Theory in a JM paper earns its place by explaining a consequential marketing phenomenon and yielding predictions that, when tested, change how managers, policy makers, or society understand the market. The official editorial guidelines frame JM as a bridge between scholarly and practical stakes, so build the minimum sufficient conceptual structure that makes the phenomenon intelligible and the predictions sharp.
Decide which route you are on and signal it honestly; do not disguise an empirics-first paper as theory-first (a HARKing risk).
【Phenomenon to explain】[...]
【Route】theory-first / empirics-first (declared honestly)
【Mechanism】[...]; boundary conditions: [...]
【Predictions】H1...Hk at level [...] → outcome [...]
【Process / contingencies】mediators: [...]; moderators: [...]
【Managerial logic】if mechanism holds → decision maker should [...]
【Next step】jm-literature-positioning
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jm-skillsBuilds 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.
Guides building the conceptual core of a JMR manuscript: behavioral hypotheses with tested mechanisms or structural/econometric model primitives and identification. Avoids managerial framing.
Positions a JM manuscript in a substantive marketing conversation, defending against the 'new-context replication' rejection by naming the conversation, stating the prevailing understanding, and writing an explicit new-context defense.