In either the common scenario of a distributor picking up or losing a client, or the less common event of product ownership changing, you should tell people who need to know. And ONIX 3.0 offers ample means to improve accuracy about market definitions.

Who needs to know is covered beautifully in an infographic published by our UK sister agency, the Book Industry Communication (BIC) group:

This documentation will cover the most common case of distribution change as a detailed workflow, but please read the common problem section below as there are some practices in North America that work against this simple and clear method.

Change of distribution

There are so many options possible when a publisher sells a product line to another publisher (starting with whether the ISBN is being maintained or not) that a workflow chart would get unnecessarily complex. Suffice it to say here, changing ISBNs is simple and maintaining the previous publisher’s ISBNs requires trading partners who understand what the expected outcome should be.

The common case, where distribution changes, is handled in ONIX by

Code list 65 Product Availability

Code “43”

Description: No longer supplied by us
Notes: Identify new supplier in <NewSupplier> if possible

ONIX 2.1 also supports Code List 54 and the equivalent code is:

Code “EX”

Description: No longer stocked by us
Wholesaler or vendor only

The less common case, where the product’s ownership changes publisher, is handled in ONIX by

ONIX Code List 64 Publishing Status

Code “05”

Description: No longer our product
Notes: Ownership of the product has been transferred to another publisher (with details of acquiring publisher if possible in PR.19 (ONIX 2.1) OR P.19 (ONIX 3.0))

Optional consideration: There is a way to use the mandatory ONIX record’s notification codes to make a clear statement of selling or acquiring a product BUT the use case it supports is publisher to publisher communication and it’s not clear how many are prepared to use it. It’s noted here for reference and consideration, as better support of notification codes may help solve issues.

ONIX Code List 01 Notification or update type

Code “08”

Description: Notice of sale
Notes: Notice of sale of a product, from one publisher to another: sent by the publisher disposing of the product

Code “09”

Description: Notice of acquisition
Notes: Notice of acquisition of a product, by one publisher from another: sent by the acquiring publisher

A typical workflow for the common use case of a change in distribution

Notices

ONIX metadata

Common problems

Forthcoming books

In a well-planned change of distribution (or a change of ownership), there will be forthcoming books that will never be handled by the outgoing distributor (or publisher) and they represent a potential for extra costs. A common solution is for the incoming distributor to list these forthcoming books and accept orders in advance of the distribution change. This is an excellent solution if this information is announced in advance of any records appearing for these products. Your trading partners often have associations linking publishers and distributors and, if they aren't prepared, these forthcoming records can cause problems. It’s probably best if the outgoing distributor never carried the records. If the publication dates are months in the future, the outgoing distributor might work with their trading partners on accepting an early transfer to the new distributor.

In a less-well-planned change of distribution (no judgement!), where the advance notice is better measured in weeks, it might make the most sense to leave any existing “Not Yet Published” records with the outgoing distributor and add new ones to the first release of data by the incoming distributor.

Distributors supplying non-standard ONIX

The most common problem in North American data is created by distributors (often supported by similar retailer and publisher expectations) supplying data that does NOT recognize that the ONIX standard defines both Sales Rights and Publishing Status as describing the publisher’s relationship to the ISBN/product. These feeds usually feature the distributor using the publisher’s Sales Rights as a proxy statement for their territorial rights and supplying either incomplete or no territory statements defining their rights.

The logic ONIX uses to communicate change like this clearly depends on consistent use of its definitions. Maybe we all can get on without using Notification Type codes for Publisher Ownership but we have to rely on meaningful status codes to know what’s going on with other changes.

I’ll describe a particularly extreme example of the consequences of this practice. Please note that this list is based on an actual and real use of metadata in BiblioShare. It is neither enhanced for effect nor is it a good idea with good outcomes.

BookNet Canada received a notice from the outgoing distributor about the upcoming distribution change but we did not receive any advance notice concerning the data plans of the incoming distributor. Problems with the existing feed were traced to overwriting by competing records issued by the incoming distributor supplied as follows:

This is an extreme example in the length of advance notice provided and its misuse of the definition of “Forthcoming”, but not atypical in adding the incoming books before the actual change and its lack of reference to, or apparent knowledge of, the published definition found in the Notes. Many companies use a proprietorial definition or subset list of status codes but refer to their data as “ONIX” because they use its format.

When questioned about these practices, if any reply is made, we’re normally told retailers understand what they mean and that this is the expected practice.

Food for thought

BookNet receives questions from Canadian publishers who are being questioned about these sorts of practices by US distributors. The US distributors need accurate statement to define markets. The above practices do not actually define Canada as a market consistently and certainly not well. Ill-defined Canadian data being compared to a US distributor claiming non-exclusive supplier rights to our market cannot be disputed (at least by the metadata or a set of business rules using it). Fully one-third of the Supply Details that carry a Supplier Role Code in BiblioShare’s ONIX 2.1 data (that’s “only” just over 100,000 in total because Supplier Role remains poorly supported) claim “Non-exclusive supplier rights.” Most are US distributors supplying metadata to Canada.


This originally appeared on the BNC Blog at https://www.booknetcanada.ca/blog/2020/1/27/communicating-divestment-in-onix-how-to-do-it-and-common-problems. Subscribe the the blog RSS at https://www.booknetcanada.ca/blog?format=rss.