From jms-skills
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.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jms-skills:jms-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have a dataset, a field site, or a phenomenon but not yet a question JMS would call a *contribution*
JMS publishes work that engages an organizational or management phenomenon and moves a theoretical conversation about it. Two features distinguish a JMS-fit topic. First, it is phenomenon-rooted: there is a real-world organizational puzzle (a strategic shift, an entrepreneurial process, an institutional tension, a managerial practice) that the paper takes seriously, not just a gap-in-the-literature. Second, it is pluralism-friendly: JMS will reward the question whether you answer it with a structural equation model on survey data, an inductive multi-case study, a longitudinal process narrative, or a critical/interpretive reading — so choose the method the question demands, not the one your sub-field defaults to. The journal's identity is internationally oriented and European-rooted, so context-sensitivity (institutions, national settings, comparative variation) is a strength, not a liability.
Run the question through three filters, in order:
| If the question is best described as… | Better-fit venue | JMS-fit reframe |
|---|---|---|
| A purely conceptual theory paper, no data | AMR (theory) | Add a phenomenon or empirical engagement, or pitch a Review/JMS Says |
| US-style hypothetico-deductive, micro-OB, large-N only | AMJ / JoM | Foreground the management-theory contribution and welcome a qualitative complement |
| Process-philosophical, organization-theory-for-its-own-sake | Organization Studies | Anchor in a management/strategy outcome managers care about |
| Strategy with an economics/finance identification core | SMJ | Lead with the organizational mechanism, not the estimator |
| Methods innovation, not a substantive finding | Organizational Research Methods | Use the method in service of a phenomenon contribution |
A topic that survives all three filters and lands in the JMS column is ready to build into theory.
【Phenomenon】one-sentence organizational puzzle
【Conversation】named theoretical conversation this moves
【Method fit】qualitative/process · quantitative · multi-method — and why
【So-what (draft)】theory + practice implication
【Sibling check】why JMS not AMR/AMJ/OrgStudies/JoM/SMJ
【Next step】jms-theory-development
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jms-skillsEvaluates fit and framing of theory-driven management manuscripts for Journal of Management Studies (JMS). Includes desk-reject heuristics, method/evidence bar, and house style guidance.
Sharpens research questions for Organization Science manuscripts and evaluates venue fit against ASQ, AMJ, and Management Science.
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.