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Only Connect: Better Use of Library, Publisher and End-User Metadata in a Networked World. 31 st International Supply Chain Seminar Tuesday 13 th October, 2009 Frankfurt Book Fair Renee Register Senior Product Manager OCLC Cataloging and Metadata Services.
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Only Connect:Better Use of Library, Publisher and End-User Metadata in a Networked World 31st International Supply Chain Seminar Tuesday 13th October, 2009 Frankfurt Book Fair Renee Register Senior Product Manager OCLC Cataloging and Metadata Services
The Secret Cataloger • My father
The rise of electronic title data in the publisher supply chain
Metadata players in the web environment • Publishers • Wholesalers • Retailers • Data aggregators • Search engines • Libraries • End users
Data starts with the publisherTitles can become best sellers based on pre-publication metadata
Proprietary databases with value-add services and technology
Proprietary ordering tools, selection lists, approval plans, etc. are built on the data
Business intelligence tools and services are built on title metadata
Business intelligence tools and services are built on title metadata
Libraries use publisher supply chain metadata to select and order
But most library systems require metadata in MARC format as well
The creation of MARC is normally outside the publisher supply chain data stream
But Library of Congress, OCLC and others have begun experimenting with using title data in ONIX as a starting point
Each year the amount of “stuff” increases and requires more data creation and management!
Our data and workflow silos encourage redundancy and inhibit interoperability
Envisioning new paradigms for better use and interoperability
Not yet but … We must redefine what cataloging means in the 21st century • Current ways of creating, sharing and maintaining metadata are restrictive, labor intensive and have large gaps in the chain • These gaps increase cost and create redundancies • They are simply unsustainable for libraries and the publisher supply chain
Publishers, Libraries and Secret Librarians • The paradox of ubiquity • Because metadata is now expected in the web environment, it’s taken for granted – even within our own organizations. • Metadata is both more visible and more important for discovery and business functions than ever -- but perhaps less valued. • It will never be magic or “free”! It is created somewhere and has to be maintained. It’s often free to end users but we spend a lot more time and $$ creating and maintaining it than we realize.
Where do we go from here? • Encourage a paradigm shift • Away from siloed data • Away from highly localized, labor intensive and redundant practices • Less one-at-a-time work, more automated processes • Toward a more holistic view of metadata • Build network level processes and tools that can be deployed in multiple environments and by multiple communities, including end-users • Re-use and re-mix metadata from various sources in ways that support multiple communities
Collaborate, innovate and synthesizeas metadata grows over time
Sales and usage data End-user tags, ratings LC Classification LC SubjectHeadings Reviews Cover Image DeweyClassification Annotations BISAC Subject Headings Tables ofContents Series Edition Subtitle Publisher ISBN Author Title
Some OCLC activities toward this end:Expose WorldCat on the web
Mine existing data in support of new services: WorldCat Identities • Research • Vision • How do we get there • New slides from Andy
Build terminologies services and mapping between subject schema
BISAC Subject Heading Authorities and mapping between BISAC & DDC
Dewey.info Use Dewey behind the scenes as a language-neutral information tool
Dewey.info Although the Dewey classification is owned by OCLC and licensed for use in libraries, the top three levels of the system have been released under a Creative Commons license in order to make the linked data Summaries compatible with other freely licensed data sets and to encourage others to work with the service. Panzer also promised more services to come from OCLC, including some that will show off "the versatility of Dewey as a general subject description and access tool.“ -- Library Journal
Build crosswalks and data mining services that allow “mash-up” of publisher and library data
Create opportunities for collaboration between publishers and libraries
Use the power of WorldCat to create new services for the publisher supply chain . . .