From jmr-skills
Positions a Journal of Marketing Research (JMR) manuscript against the closest behavioral, modeling, and methods literatures to frame the contribution as an advance, not a better application. Uses AMA citation conventions.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jmr-skills:jmr-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The front end reads as "we apply method X to context Y" (a better-application risk)
Because JMR spans behavioral experiments and econometric/structural modeling, a JMR paper usually sits in three conversations simultaneously. Map the nearest papers in each:
A contribution that is new on only the substantive axis but mechanically identical to prior work, or new only on method with no marketing payoff, is the classic JMR rejection.
"No one has studied X" is not a JMR contribution. Frame the positioning as a tension or unresolved question in the conversation that your design is uniquely able to settle — a conflicting finding, an untested assumption, an identification problem prior work could not solve, or a substantive prediction no existing method could test.
Name the single nearest paper and state, in one or two sentences, what is different — different mechanism, different identification, different data, or a result that overturns or qualifies theirs. Reviewers at JMR are domain experts (Coeditors route by domain), so a vague "we differ" will be caught.
For a JMR introduction, do not leave the contribution as a paragraph of prose. Create a three-row ledger and use it to write the final positioning sentences:
| Axis | Nearest comparator | Required distinction |
|---|---|---|
| Behavioral theory | Closest psychology/consumer-behavior mechanism paper | What mechanism, boundary condition, or construct relation changes? |
| Quantitative model | Closest demand, choice, pricing, advertising, or structural-model paper | What identification, estimator, data environment, or managerial counterfactual becomes possible? |
| Marketing decision | Closest substantive marketing decision paper | What would a manager, platform, retailer, or regulator now do differently? |
The ledger must name at least one comparator on every relevant axis. If one axis is empty, either the manuscript is narrower than JMR's bar or the contribution belongs in a more specialized outlet. Turn the ledger into two sentences: "Relative to X, we ..." and "This matters for marketing because ..." Avoid a literature review that names many papers but never identifies the single closest rival.
JMR uses AMA author-year style (e.g., "Thorelli (1960)" / "(Thorelli 1960)"; list all authors up to three, "et al." for four or more). There is no limit on the number of references, so cite the relevant behavioral and modeling work rather than only one stream. Configure your reference manager to AMA, not APA-numeric.
[Target] JMR
[Substantive axis] nearest papers → what changes
[Method/model axis] lineage → how yours differs
[Mechanism axis] theory advanced
[Closest paper] cite (AMA) → one-sentence distinction
[Tension framed] yes/no
[Next skill] jmr-methods
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jmr-skillsPositions 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.
Positions a JAMS manuscript's contribution against the marketing literature — locating it in the right stream, defending against 'incremental / new-context' challenges, and citing the substantive canon editors expect.
Positions a JOM manuscript by staking the gap against the right conversation and differentiating from sibling journals (AMJ, SMJ, JMS, Org Science).