HOW CAN WE HELP YOU?

Word of the day
 

languid - October 15, 2008
(adjective) without energy; slow, sluggish, listless.
 
Latest News
 

Bad Email Marketing from Priceline
This is one of the worst marke...

Permanent Hiatus
This blog is no longer being u...

What is your domain name worth? Domain appraisal can give a pointer
As you can see I've been busy ...
Sponsors
   

Recommended Links
Visit now!

WE RECOMMEND you take the time to visit the following on-line resource sites that are linked below.
 

ESSAY



7 Steps to Successful Publishing
Why Self-Publish Your Book?
Times Change - And So Should Our Publishing Str...
Write A Better Newsletter!
Publishing and Promoting of Poetry anthologies ...
The Great, Okay and the Ugly of E-Publishing
How To Publish Your Way To Success
Consider Self Publishing in Ebook Format
How eBooks Can Be Very Valuable
How to Get Your Book Reviewed
Book Marketing 101
The Indie Author Revolution
Your Spellchecker Can Catch Punctuation Mistakes
How to Find a Publisher for Your First Book
Getting A Publisher & Getting What You Want
You Can Be An Author
Why Write an eBook?
Platform Development Tip #1: Switch Writing Hats!
Cookbook Publishing - The Basic Ingredients and...
A Publisher's Rant - Why I Hate Your Articles
8 Advantages to Writing a Book as an Entrepreneur
Mission Possible: Get Published with Goals, Gui...
A Good Book Cover Design is Key
Who Else Wants to Get Screwed When Signing a Re...
PublishAmerica - Publishing Parasites
From Idea to Published Book ... How to Self-Pub...
What Hurricane Katrina Can Teach Authors
Blog Your Way to Success - What a "Blog" is?
About Writing
The Three Cs of Writing an Excellent all Purpos...
I'm A Romance Novel Hero!
The Biggest Challenge Facing A Poet, Getting Pu...
Take My Publisher, Please!
Don't Rely on your Spellchecker - or - The Impo...
A Quick Guide to ISBNs for Self-Publishers
Art Needs Time to Flower - Even in Cyberspace
Writer's Web Resources
An Appeal To The Bloggers!
A Newsletter Publisher's Main Task: Packaging V...
3 Low Cost Ways To Meet Agents & Editors
Make Big Money On Your Book - 10 H*O*T Tips
A "Plan 9" Book?
Don't Lose Your Article Back Links!
Sticks, Stones and Lawyers
Publish Anything: The Saga of a PublishAmerica ...
6 Tips For Your Writing Journey
How New Authors Can Keep Their Manuscripts Cohe...
Titles (and Subtitles) Sell Books!
The Run-on Sentence: From Here To Eternity
Ten Tips Articles
Earn Money From Freelance Writing
The Written Word
Self Publishing Success Starts With Marketing
Becoming the Total Package
Interviewing an Author: Don't Be Left Speechless
Taming The Book Proposal
Article Banks and Google Alerts Harness Your Pu...
Le Poem De La Sweat
Your Book Marketing Plan - Winning Strategies a...
Increase Freelance Sales With an Online Resume!
Learn to Write Like a Pro
Writing for the Gaming Industry
How to Build A Success Freelance Career (Part 1)
Write Science Right
Effective Networking For Writers
Snob-Bloggers: You Just Might Be A Snob If You ...
Ready, Set, Go Sell Your Book In The Real World!
Incredibly Bad Articles Will Kill Your Credibility
Could Your Book Idea Be the Next Best Seller?
Five Minute Miracles
A Few Keys to Writing Effective Dialogue
8 Tips to Get Publishers to Notice You
Documenting Everything: Your Journal is Your Lo...
How To Get A Reporter's Attention For Your Book
Speak and Touch the Heart
Complete Guidance to Write & Optimize Press... Wake Up Your Writing Spirit 10 Article Writing Quirks Choose the website correctly
Freelance Writing on the Internet
How the Writer Survives
The Phantoms of Six Mile Road
How to Develop a Dynamic Story
Getting Started in Column Writing
Why You Need a Newsletter
How Anyone Who Knows How to Type Can Write an A...
The High Cost of a Six-Figure Book Advance
A Person Is Known By the Blog He Keeps
How Author Royalties Are Calculated
The effective way to purchase your favorite pro...
Steps to Publishing Success
An eBook Publisher's Dilemma: Should I Use PDF ...
Give Your Readers A Sample
 
 
 

A Quick Guide to ISBNs for Self-Publishers

by: Jennifer Tribe


Sponsored Links

A Quick Guide to ISBNs for Self-Publishers

ISBN stands for International Standard Book Number. It is a code assigned to every published book that uniquely identifies it in the marketplace. ISBNs make it easier and more efficient for libraries, booksellers and others in the publishing industry to order, distribute and catalog books.

When To Use an ISBN

You need to assign an ISBN to any content you intend to distribute through outside channels such as bookstores, catalogues or libraries. ISBNs should be placed on

-- print books

-- electronic books

-- videos

-- audio cassettes and CDs

-- CD-ROMs, and

-- other items as detailed by the International ISBN Agency.

You need to issue a separate ISBN for each edition of your book and for every format. For example, if you issued the same book as a print book, e-book, audio book and Braille book, you would require a separate identifier for each. If one year later, you updated the manuscript and re-issued the book, you would assign new ISBNs to this second edition in each of its different formats.

Deciphering the Numbering System

All ISBNs are currently 10 digits. (The industry will slowly be transitioning to a 13-digit system starting in 2005. See http://www.isbn.org/standards/home/isbn/transition.asp for more information on the change.)

The digits identify

-- the group (country, area or language area of the publisher)

-- the publisher, and

-- the title of the item.

The last digit is a check digit.

The group number is comprised of one to three digits. Zero is the number for the English language group that includes the United States, English-speaking Canada, the U.K., Australia and other countries.

The publisher number is comprised of two to seven digits. The more ISBNs a publisher uses, the small their publisher number.

Publishers that use more than 100,000 ISBNs are given a publisher number of only two digits. If you apply for 10 or fewer ISBNs, you will be assigned a publisher number with seven digits. Everyone else falls somewhere in the middle.

Thus anyone in the book trade can look at an ISBN and know roughly how big you are as a publisher by the number of ISBNs you have applied to use. This is why self-publishing gurus like Dan Poynter recommend acquiring your ISBNs in blocks of 100 to avoid being labeled “small potatoes.”

Poynter further recommends that you use an ISBN from the middle of your list of 100 for your first book, since a 0 or 1 as your title number will reveal you as a first-timer.

The check digits range from one to 10. Since there is space for only one check digit, the number 10 is represented by an X.

How To Acquire ISBNs

ISBNs in the United States are administered by R.R. Bowker. Bowker charges a fee to process your application. Ten ISBNs cost $225; 100 ISBNs cost $800. Visit www.bowker.com for more information, or to complete an application.

ISBNs in Canada are administered by the National Public Library as a free service. Visit http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/isbn/index-e.html for more information or to apply on-line.

For more information on the ISBN system and how it works, visit www.isbn.org.

About The Author

Juiced Consulting helps business owners package what they know into information products –- such as books, audiotapes and teleclasses –- that they can sell to generate new business revenue. For a free newsletter and other resources, visit www.juicedconsulting.com.
jtribe@juicedconsulting.com

 

 
Home :: Links :: Site map :: Contact us
©Copyrighted by Termpapermachine.com. info All Rights Reserved 2007