Archive for February 2008

Greetings from my little niche in the writing world

Linda BergeronNewly organized home office – ah, at last. The poems have finally landed in an alpha file of standard folders (instead of the latest one loosely tucked in the front of an assigned notebook). I’ll be checking into the next entry deadline this morning.

The writing table went from obscurity under papers in the middle of a crowded room to a deserved place in front of the window-with-a-view. (Why did I wait so long?)

And the hardest task, but most rewarding when done right: reining in the obstinate self from a litany of diversions and distractions to the important work – facing the white page.

What is a BISAC code?

Clair ButtonWhat are BISAC codes?

As I was working with one member of our Writers Guild of Eastern Oregon to design her website as a standard and model for our group, she asked the question, “What are BISAC codes?” It was one piece of information I believed we should include in the data about her books. Why? Because my first publisher told me that was industry standard data, and necessary.

When I self published later (don’t even ask about that #@*&% subsidy press publisher), I continued to follow that advice because I did a little research and discovered the purpose of the codes.

BISAC (Book Industry Standards and Communications) codes are a “standard used by many companies throughout the supply chain to categorize books based on topical content.”

The codes are often required for participation in many publishing industry databases, which may seem obscure to those of us involved only in writing. However, you can understand it more clearly if you realize that those codes provide your local bookstore manager a means to categorize, store, and decide how to display your book. Without your knowing it, those codes may be incorporated in the bar code on the book cover.

BISAC codes are established and controlled by the Book Industry Study Group, Inc. (BISG), the industry’s leading trade association for policy, standards and research. Membership consists of publishers, manufacturers, suppliers, wholesalers, retailers, librarians and others engaged in the business of print and electronic media. The BISG mission “is to create a more informed, empowered, and efficient industry supply chain.”

When you think about participating in the book industry as a publisher, recognize that electronic standards, efficiency, and reducing the operating costs of your suppliers, distributors, and retail outlets are part of your mission, too. Take the time to look up and list your own BISAC codes.

BISAC Subject Headings List A-J

BISAC Subject Headings List K-Z:

Roadmap to book identifiers:

http://www.bisg.org/what-we-do-18-32-roadmap-of-identifiers.php

Article by Clair Button, Writers Guild of Eastern Oregon, www.wgeo.org

Introducing Author Glenda Carter

I am Glenda M. Carter, author of Sacred Shadow, Sacred Ground: A Vietnam War Widow’s Journey Through Unresolved Grief.

I currently live, work and play in eastern Oregon.

Hello World! A new world for WGEO.

Writers Guild of Eastern Oregon is reaching out with new media. Stay tuned for regular input from featured authors.

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