By Jim Milliot
(Publishers Weekly) -- With only one year to go before all newly
published books must carry 13-digit ISBNs, rather than the traditional
10 digits, some industry operations managers are worried that their
colleagues on the sales and editorial sides are not taking the change
seriously enough. "The issue of the 13-digit ISBN is not just for the
IT department," said Laura Nixon Dawson, an industry consultant who is
helping the Book Industry Study Group educate the book community about
the ins and outs of the 13-digit code. The move to 13 digits, said
Laurie Stark of Random House, "is a major shift that will have ripples
throughout all publishing companies."
While 13-digit ISBNs will not begin
to be phase din until next January, publishers can start using them
now by adding the prefix 978 and then recalculating the check (or
final) number in the ISBN. (To convert the number, go to
www.bisg.org/isbn-13/converters.html.) Publishers can run dual
10-digit and 13-digit ISBNs until next year. Beginning next January,
only 13-digit ISBNs will be issued.
The move will not only align ISBNs
with the worldwide number system used on all products that are for
sale, but will double the number of ISBNs available. By 2007, Dawson
notes, titles submitted to the Library of Congress and Books in Print
must include ISBN-13s; all invoices and sales documents will need to
display 13 digits; and sales reports will be aggregated using 13
digits. As backlist titles are reprinted, plates will be changed to
accommodate ISBN-13.
"ISBN-13 is all about easing
friction in the supply chain," said Bob Bolick, v-p of global business
planning for McGraw-Hill Education. The move to 13 digits, he said,
"will let publishers sell books in more places' by making the coding
compatible with other retail products. Barnes & Noble's Joe Gonnella
said the adoption of ISBN-13 will help companies reduce costs and help
to speed the check-out process by simplifying the identification of
products. He said B&N will work with publishers to make sure the
transition to ISBN-13 goes as smoothly as possible, adding that the
bookseller hopes, over the next two years, to get to the point where
most books carry the 13 digits.
BISG has been educating industry
members about the importance of 13 digits for almost two years, and
its efforts have largely succeeded in getting the IT departments up to
speed on the issue. "Now it's time to expand beyond the operational
people," said outgoing BISG executive director Jeff Abraham. If
editors use 10-digit ISBNs after Jan. 1, 2007, and orders come in with
13 digits, that could create confusion within a company, said Bolick,
who noted that MHE has already begun receiving some orders using 13
digits.
Tech people are aware that the
intricacies of the 13-digit ISBNs can sound like a foreign language to
many, but as Bolick observed, "retailers will be talking 13, not 10,
so we might as well speak their Greek rather than our Roman."
Copyright © 2006 Publishers Weekly