The Unseen Hand of Metadata

Library Sales, Timely Metadata, and the Canadian Publisher

ONIX 3.0 – A Gnome’s Perspective on Digital Values for the Faint of Heart
Introducing BNC's BISAC to Thema Translator
ONIX 2.1 to 3.0 Converters: What They Can and Can't Do

Covering your Bases: 2014 Standards Implementation and Business Planning

Five New Year's Resolutions
On January 1st, certain New Year’s resolutions are always popular—eat better, exercise more, quit smoking (again), finally write that book—but the start of a new year is a great time for business-related resolutions, too. So if you’re looking to get more out of your book-related business, here are five resolutions that can help you start the year off right.
Better Living Through Better Metadata
What Does It Mean to Implement ONIX 3.0?
It’s a vexing question. I like to explain ONIX for Books by separating out the standard (what you track as metadata) from the technical side (XML, which can be thankfully ignored in this post). ONIX as a standard is a way for two companies to exchange information about books without ambiguity by using published definitions. Using the standard involves those companies agreeing between them on what level of detail they need from the ONIX data fields to support their systems and sales.