From orgsci-skills
Positions Organization Science manuscripts by joining conversations, problematizing assumptions, and integrating across disciplines (org theory, strategy, sociology, economics, psychology).
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/orgsci-skills:orgsci-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Your introduction reads as "no one has studied X" (gap-spotting)
Organization Science is interdisciplinary — it draws on organization theory, strategy, sociology, economics, and psychology — so positioning is not citing everything; it is locating one conversation and advancing it. Replace gap-spotting with problematization: surface and challenge an assumption the existing literature takes for granted, then show how your study revises it. Because the editorial standard is overall contribution ("theoretical novelty is neither necessary nor sufficient"), positioning should make clear which contribution source you are claiming — new theory, new data, methodological insight, a new setting that tests generalizability, a sharper mechanism, or relevance to a social problem or grand challenge.
Treat this skill as an executable review pass, not a prose hint. First lock a level map, a mechanism paragraph, and the cover-letter contribution statement; then judge whether the current manuscript answers the venue's real reader: interdisciplinary organization reviewers who ask whether the mechanism travels across levels of analysis.
claim / evidence / risk / manuscript location rows, so the next agent can edit rather than rediscover the issue.resources/official-source-map.md has been checked for upload-week rules and the manuscript has one concrete fix for the largest venue-specific risk.【Home conversation】the one literature this paper joins
【Challenged assumption】what the field takes for granted that you revise
【Cross-level / cross-discipline bridges】micro↔macro, borrowed theory translated
【Contribution source set up】new theory / data / method / setting / mechanism / social relevance
【Next step】orgsci-methods or orgsci-contribution-framing
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin orgsci-skillsPositions an Organization Studies manuscript within its theoretical conversation, articulating what the field knows, misses, and the gap the paper closes.
Positions an Administrative Science Quarterly manuscript within organization-theory conversations by naming the conversation, characterizing assumptions, locating tensions, and staking a theoretical opening.
Guides the front end of an AMJ manuscript to engage relevant literatures and stake a clear theoretical position by surfacing tensions, contingencies, or problematizations; avoids gap-spotting.