From jmis-skills
Guides researchers in determining whether a question fits Journal of Management Information Systems by testing IS-management and economics-of-IS relevance before theory work.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jmis-skills:jmis-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have an IS/technology phenomenon but cannot say what *managerial or economic* question it answers
JMIS rewards questions at the technology–organization–economics nexus: how information systems and technology are managed, valued, and governed, and how they reshape firms, markets, and platforms. The strongest JMIS topics make the technology load-bearing in an economic or managerial mechanism — not a backdrop. Use these tests:
| Your question is really about… | Strong JMIS fit if… | Reroute / risk |
|---|---|---|
| IT investment and firm performance | identification of IT's causal value, not just correlation with spend | pure finance → a finance journal |
| a digital platform / marketplace | network effects, two-sidedness, governance, or pricing are theorized | descriptive platform stats → weak fit |
| IS adoption / use / behavior | a technology-specific behavioral mechanism, validated | generic TAM replication → desk-reject risk |
| a built artifact / ML system | managerial utility evaluated vs. real baselines, design knowledge generalized | algorithm-only novelty → a CS venue |
| security / privacy | the economics or management of risk, disclosure, breaches | a crypto/protocol result → a security venue |
| a policy / governance change | the IT-mediated effect on firms or markets is the point | a pure econ result with IS as setting → econ journal |
A team has clickstream and seller data from a marketplace and a draft titled "Predicting which sellers churn." As written it is a churn-prediction paper — a CS/data-mining contribution. The JMIS-shaped version asks an economic-of-platforms question: does the platform's algorithmic ranking redesign cause marginal sellers to exit, and does that shrink buyer-side variety and platform revenue? Now the technology (the ranking algorithm) is load-bearing, there is an identifying event (the redesign), and the takeaway is managerial (how aggressively to personalize ranking trades off short-run match quality against long-run seller supply). Same data, JMIS-grade question.
Topic selection is also an outlet decision, and it is cheaper to make now than after a desk return. Write the single sentence, then ask three coauthor-style questions: Who on the JMIS board would champion this? Which reviewer would say "wrong journal"? If a reviewer says "this is really a MISQ/ISR/econ paper," can I answer in one sentence? If you cannot, the fit is borderline and you should resolve it — by sharpening the management/economics angle or by rerouting — before investing in jmis-theory-development.
JMIS's identity — shaped by Vladimir Zwass's long editorship and his parallel work on electronic commerce — leans toward the management and economics of IS. Questions that sit squarely in its wheelhouse: the business value and complementarities of IT and emerging tech (now including AI/analytics); the design, governance, and competition of digital platforms and marketplaces; e-commerce and digital channels; the economics of information security and privacy; decision support and business analytics in real managerial settings; and the organizational and market impacts of new technology. A topic that maps cleanly onto one of these — with the technology load-bearing — starts with the wind at its back; one that only borrows an IS setting to make a reference-discipline point starts behind.
Three quick tests separate a JMIS topic from a near-miss. The deletion test: remove the IT artifact from the question — if it still makes sense, the technology was a setting, not the subject, and the paper is probably not IS. The audience test: picture the JMIS readership (IS scholars who study the management and economics of technology) — can you name the subset who would cite this and the subset who would shrug? If you cannot name either, the topic is too diffuse. The decision test: does answering the question change a real technology decision (invest, govern, price, design, disclose)? JMIS's management identity rewards a question whose answer a manager or platform could act on; a purely descriptive "we characterize X" topic, however novel, sits closer to the journal's margin.
Do not route to jmis-theory-development while the fit verdict is still "borderline." A topic that is unsure of its home wastes theory and analysis effort, because a reframe at the contribution stage often forces the mechanism to be rebuilt. Resolve the fit first — sharpen the management/economics angle until the deletion, audience, and decision tests all pass, or reroute honestly to the sibling that fits — and only then commit downstream work.
【Journal】Journal of Management Information Systems (JMIS)
【One-sentence question】technology + managerial/economic stake
【IS-management hinge】who acts differently and how
【Economics-of-IS angle】incentives / value / platform / security economics (or n/a)
【Fit verdict】strong / borderline / reroute → which sibling
【Next skill】jmis-theory-development
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jmis-skillsEvaluates manuscript fit for JMIS and guides framing, method, and style for IS management/strategy papers targeting the AIS Senior Scholars' Basket.
Scopes and stress-tests whether a research question fits the Journal of Management Studies (JMS), focusing on phenomenon-grounded management-theory questions. Guides fit assessment and framing direction.
Helps shape and stress-test research questions for Management Science (INFORMS) by confirming decision-relevance, selecting the correct Department, and checking fit against sister journals to avoid desk rejection.