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The Value of Sticky Articles Joel Huber Duke University.

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Presentation on theme: "The Value of Sticky Articles Joel Huber Duke University."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Value of Sticky Articles Joel Huber Duke University

2 Why Sticky? ► Their messages are easily recalled ► Their methods, theory and substantive results are replicated ► And they are often cited ► Sticky Articles are influential publications

3 Successful publications are like successful ideas ► Sticky ideas are  Story like  Simple  Unexpected  Concrete  Credible  Emotional

4 How is a publication like a story? ► Stories involve central characters who are in conflict, the story is about the resolution of that conflict ► There are three kinds of stores in JMR publications  Theory stories  Methodology stories  Substantive stories

5 Three kinds of stories in JMR StoryConflictResult Theoretical Which theory is best? Prune or build theoretical tree Method Which method? Establish better method Market or Consumer Which behavior? Predict behavior

6 Story strategy-target ► Who is the story for?  The conflict of the story defines who is interested— targeting is critical ► Core readers know the substantive area and will read your paper because it is central to their knowledge base—they are also your reviewers ► Incremental readers are drawn into your story particularly if it is sticky—these are critical readers

7 Story strategy-content ► Most publications have multiple stories, but one of the stories needs to have priority: Theory, method or substantive contribution ► One story is appropriately missing—the researcher’s story—that personal story is irrelevant

8 How to make the story SIMPLE ► Develop short simple ways to tell the story—research elevator speech  Avoid multiple stories  Define your paper in terms of a series of short sentences or propositions  Avoid acronyms  Be consistent in your terminology  Make up as few new labels as possible

9 How to make the story UNEXPECTED ► The ending is known from the abstract, but the method remains surprising ► Stress the surprising nature of your result  Prior conflict among researchers  Set up reasons for alternative outcomes  Measure peoples’ priors  Stress the logical nature of your final result—it is not quirky or random

10 How to make your story EMOTIONAL ► Generally emotions such as boredom, elation, anger and love have no place in a scholarly journal ► However, academics are emotional about theories, methods and practice, so play that up ► Further, the more the story is concrete, the more it will inspire emotions on the part of the reader

11 How to make your story Concrete ► Research is framed in abstract terms but your data and implications are or can be made so ► Articles often open with a specific scenario of a shopper or a marketer posing a question about what they should or will do ► In your discussion section bring up specific ways your results can be used

12 How to make the story CREDIBLE ► Build your results from methods accepted by your audience ► Show your results in different contexts  Different products, markets, contexts and methods of analyses ► Display your results in different ways  Verbally, graphically, tables ► Credibility builds from making the same point from different perspectives

13 How to encourage sequels ► A complete story is one that cannot replicated or modified in sequel form ► It is hard to add to a circle--It will not be referenced as the story has been ► Make your story as general as possible to encourage replications with respect to your theory, method or substantive results ► Those replications are even better if they come from other researchers

14 Key ideas ► Publications are like ideas…if they are easy to remember and valuable they will endure ► Ideas that are sticky come from  Focused stories that are  Simple, concrete, emotional, unexpected and credible ► Writing sticky papers is difficult, but critical for impact


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