This is the second part of a series. The first part can be found at https://booknetcanada.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/UserDocs/pages/1259733139/How+do+you+best+represent+the+names+of+your+publisher+and+imprint+in+your+metadataThe third part can be found at https://booknetcanada.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/UserDocs/pages/1259962559/Imprint+and+publisher+name%3A+Opportunities+in+ONIX. 



We don't like to drop terms in publishing, but we do love to take old terms and re-purpose them. Almost all book metadata includes both Imprint Name and Publisher Name so, just like how Publication Date can mean almost any date in some circumstance because it's the only date that's always available, so too Imprint and Publisher can be... well... multifaceted? Here are some ways Publisher Name and Imprint Name interact.

Simple case: The same name appears as both Publisher and Imprint

Simple case: Publisher clarifies a division of some sort

This is simple, clear, and predictable and an ideal model to use for any publishing program (but see "Hidden hierarchies" below for its limit).

Complicating factor: Other company's poor data practices

Complicating factor: Hidden hierarchies

The Anansi/Groundwood example above (where one entity represents itself as more than one publisher with multiple imprints) is common. Supporting multiple publishers can help mark useful divisions — publishers having different exclusive distributor in a market, for example — as publishers represent legal entities they can support distinct contracts. While publisher as a legal entity is usually enough, the complication happens because legal entities (or parts thereof) can be bought. Ownership can become layered. A multinational's rationalization and restructuring might include:

Summary: Within hidden hierarchies, almost anything can happen to a specific book or grouping, including changes that are inexplicable to an outsider. Companies of this size are generally very good at announcements and have extensive contact with trading partners, but the amount of change can still be hard to keep up with.

Complicating factor: Distributor's choices

It's not seen as often now, but distributors can use the two available name slots, Imprint and Publisher, creatively when their client is another distributor or similar unit: 

Next week in our third and final instalment in this series, we'll look at the solution ONIX offers and how partial implementation of the ONIX standard perpetuates complication in the Publisher and Imprint Name game.