Power
of Richness Paper Feedback Session
This
session is designed for people who are developing qualitative research and who
would benefit from feedback on their working papers. This working paper
feedback session follows the panel session of the Power or Richness PDW (OMT
PDW 10079). Participants interested in submitting a working paper for feedback
in the working paper discussion groups need to submit their papers (more than
10 and less than 35 pages) via website we have created for this. Working papers
will be accepted for evaluation and feedback in this part of the workshop on a
first-come, first-served basis until we fill all the slots we can make
available.
Here is what you need to do:
1.
Pre-registration is required.
To register, please visit https://secure.aomonline.org/PDWReg. The
deadline to register is July 11, 2008.
2. Once you have pre-registered, submit your
paper in pdf format via the website we have created here:
http://ichair.professor-murmann.net
Here
are important rules to follow: Last year we big had problems in assigning
papers because people did not provide keywords. Hence this year we
require that you provide keywords in the following way in the submission form
which you reach by going to
http://ichair.professor-murmann.net
From
the predefined list you chose a topic.
This
list was developed based on the expertise of dicussants. This list is
this:
single case study
multiple case analysis
interviews
archival research
ethnography
mixed methods
longitutinal research
coding general
open (first order) coding
axial (second order) coding
automatic coding
semiotic analysis
grounded theory
collaborative research--insiders and outsiders
culture
organizational learning and adaptation
creativity and innovation
strategic alliances
perception,
categorization,
identity
There
is a keyword field below the topic list into which you can type keywords.
As your first keyword in this field we want you to chose a second topic from
our topic list above. As your second keyword in this keyword field, each
keyword being separated by comma or a space, you need to indicate the state of
development your paper is in, selecting from the following five options:
Early Draft
Advanced Draft
Mature Paper
Paper already under review
Paper reviewed and rejected by a journal
You
may put down additional keywords to the two required ones in the keyword field,
but you cannot go beyond the 80 characters available. So at minimum your
submission needs to look like this example:
Topic:
creativity and innovation
Keywords: ethnography, early draft
Don't
forget: If you do not chose a topic from our list above, a first
keyword from the same list and a second keyword indicating the state of
development of your paper, your paper will not be processed.
At
the end of the submission form, you have to check a box to agree with the
following statement: "On behalf of all authors, I hereby declare in good
faith that this submitted paper is compliant with the instructions as stated in
the call for papers and is not an irregular submission. In particular, it has
not been submitted for publication in a substantially similar form in parallel.
It does not substantially resubmit any previously published result, up to my
knowledge. It is not a plagiarism of content as understood by the academic
community." We could not modify this statement in the conference
management software. For the purposes of this PDW, please dis-regard the
line: "In particular, it has not been submitted for publication in a
substantially similar form in parallel."
If
you have any questions or problems with the submission process, please contact
Peter Murmann at: peter.murmann@unsw.edu.au
The
Discussants for the session are:
John Weeks; IMD;
Klaus Weber; Northwestern U.;
Kimberly D. Elsbach; U. of California, Davis;
Mariann Jelinek; College
of William and Mary;
Candace Jones; Boston College;
Mitchell P
Koza; Rutgers U.;
Christine Quinn Trank; Texas Tech U.;
Jean M.
Bartunek; Boston College;
Gina Colarelli O'Connor; Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute;
John Joseph; Northwestern U.;
The Organizers are J. Peter Murmann; AGSM-Australian School of Business; Diana L. Day; Rutgers U.;