Management research: What do management researchers do?
- Whetten, D. A. 1989. What constitutes a theoretical contribution? Academy of Management Review, 14(4): 490-495.
- AMJ Editors. 2011-2012. Publishing in AMJ.
- Bennis, W. G., & O'Toole, J. 2005. How business schools lost their way. Harvard Business Review, 83(5): 96-104, 154.
- Bergh, D. D., Sharp, B. M., Aguinis, H., & Li, M. 2017. Is there a credibility crisis in strategic management research? Evidence on the reproducibility of study findings. Strategic Organization, 15(3): 423-436.
Empirical studies on doing research: What do we know how to make achievements?
- Leahey, E., Beckman, C. M., & Stanko, T. L. 2017. Prominent but less productive: The impact of interdisciplinarity on scientists' research. Administrative Science Quarterly, 62(1): 105-139.
- Seibert, S. E., Kacmar, K. M., Kraimer, M. L., Downes, P. E., & Noble, D. 2017. The role of research strategies and professional networks in management scholars' productivity. Journal of Management, 43(4): 1103-1130.
- Ryazanova, O., McNamara, P., & Aguinis, H. 2017. Research performance as a quality signal in international labor markets: Visibility of business schools worldwide through a global research performance system. Journal of World Business, 52(6): 831-841.
- Rynes, S. L., Colbert, A. E., & O’Boyle, E. H. 2018. When the “Best Available Evidence” Doesn’t Win: How Doubts About Science and Scientists Threaten the Future of Evidence-Based Management. Journal of Management, 44(8): 2995-3010.
- Starbuck, W. H. 2005. How much better are the most-prestigious journals? The statistics of academic publication. Organization Science, 16(2): 180-200.
- Singh, G., Haddad, K. M., & Chow, C. W. 2007. Are articles in “top” management journals necessarily of higher quality? Journal of Management Inquiry, 16(4): 319-331.