Welcome to our Knowledge Base
How to find topics
Finding interesting questions to answer with your research while getting published can be very hard as a junior researcher. The following papers help with finding interesting questions, making significant contributions and avoiding common pitfalls.
Finding a topic:
- That’s Interesting: Towards a Phenomenology of Sociology and a Sociology of Phenomenology
- Editor’s Comments: Avoiding Type III Errors: Formulating IS Research Problems that Matter
- What Makes Management Research Interesting, And Why Does It Matter?
- Moving Forward by Looking Back: Reclaiming Unconventional Research Contexts and Samples in Organizational Scholarship
- Type II Reviewing Errors and the Search for Exciting Papers
- From the Editors: Publishing in AMJ — Part 1: Topic Choice
- Editor’s Comments: Why Top Journals Accept Your Paper
- Moving the Needle: Making a Contribution When the Easy Questions Have Been Answered
- Generating Research Questions Through Problematization
- How to Build an Economic Model in Your Spare Time
- A Framework for Conceptual Contributions in Marketing
- A Structured Approach to Presenting Phd Theses: Notes for Candidates
- Beyond rigor and relevance: Producing consumable research about information systems
