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Many LibraryData reports display title-level data in broken out by ISBN Clustersclusters. This differs from SalesData, which reports data at a per-ISBN level. This page will help you understand why ISBN clusters Clusters are used, and answer some common questions about ISBN Clustersclusters!

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Why does LibraryData use ISBN

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clusters?

Libraries report their collection data to us broken out by their Catalog ID or Recordrecord. Each Record record can contain multiple ISBNs, often all of the editions of a single work. When you use the library, you put a hold on a copy of Pride and Prejudice, for example, and you usually don't mind which particular edition or ISBN you receive - just that you get the first available copy! So in the library's ILS (Integrated Library System), the circulation and holdings data is counted against the Recordrecord.

Each library includes different ISBNs in their Record record for the same title, often depending on which editions they've had in their collection, their data sources, etc. So the ISBN Cluster cluster for a particular title can differ from library to library. When you look at a multi-library aggregate, like the ALL Libraries, we merge clusters together to create the most inclusive cluster based on common ISBNs. 

For example, if we're looking at the cluster for Pride and Prejudice, you can see that each of libraries 1, 2, and 3 each have different ISBNs in their Recordrecord. Library 1 has one ISBN in common with Library 2, and Library 2 has one ISBN in common with Library 3. Those common ISBNs are used to create the ALL Libraries ISBN cluster for this title, pulling in all of the ISBNs from these three library records. As additional libraries ' data joins join the ALL Libraries Panel, the ALL Libraries ISBN cluster grows will grow based on the common ISBNs in the libraries' records. 

Library 1Library 2Library 3ALL Libraries
9780141199078978014143951897801414395189780141439518
97807553314689780679783268
9780679783268
9781593083243

9780141199078
97819046330139780755331468
97815511102889781593083243
97806797832689781904633013
97806796016859781551110288
97806794054299780679601685
97803072909229780679405429
97818532683359780307290922

9781853268335


What do ISBN clusters include?

Often ISBN Clusters clusters include different editions of the same work. These can include different formats, like a paperback, hardcover, and mass-market edition, or editions released by different publishers. Libraries don't necessarily own copies of each ISBN in the ISBN Cluster - cluster — old ISBNs may have been weeded from the collection, or other ISBNs may have been added via bibliographic data imports to a library's ILS. This is why you may also see NCR editions' ISBNs listed within a cluster. 

Why am I seeing an ISBN cluster containing multiple works?

Some ISBN Clusters clusters may contain ISBNs for different but related works. For example, occasionally all of the titles in a series or set may be clustered as a single work. Libraries can catalog ISBNs in a single record for many different reasons, and LibraryData displays the ISBN Clusters clusters based on the data delivered to us by Librarieslibraries. Human error is always a possibility! 

If you believe we should review an ISBN cluster and work with a library on adjusting their catalog record, you can submit feedback on a cluster by clicking the "What are ISBN Clusters?" button on the Book Activity results for any cluster. 

Individual

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library clusters and the ALL Libraries cluster

When you're viewing data for a single library (for example, looking at Marigold Library System ALL), the data you will see the data represented in the clusters by will be according to their ILS. (The only exception being that if one ISBN is present in multiple records, those records are combined.) If you are viewing data for multiple libraries (for example, in a Collection Gaps: Compare to Library report) the data will be reported using the ALL Libraries cluster, to ensure that the comparisons are apples-to-apples and the circulation data represents the same group of ISBNs. 

An informational information box on the results page of all reports will tell you which aggregate's ISBN cluster you're viewing. 

Why am I seeing so many different clusters in the search results?

The Queries via the search bar looks will look for any clusters matching your search term in the title, series, subtitle, and contributor name fields of the bibliographic data. It's also the case that there can be multiple clusters for the same work, if there are no ISBNs in common between multiple libraries' records for the work. The results are ranked by the most active cluster in the most recent week. 

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SalesData reports (the Bestseller, Single ISBN, Multi ISBN, Market Share, Market Comp, and Gap Analysis) do not return ISBN cluster data - just sales per distinct ISBN. In LibraryData reports like the Popular Books report, the All Market ISBN Cluster sales column adds together the sales for each ISBN in the cluster for the selected reporting period - — so that, again, so you're comparing apples-to-apples. 


Do you have more questions about ISBN clusters? Email us at librarydata@booknetcanada.ca for help!

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