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From Now On, Use Only One Bar Code

Angela Bole
May, 2007

Book Industry Study Group Approves Policy Statement on the Elimination Of Dual Identifiers

From Now On, Use Only One Bar Code

 

by Angela Bole

 

The bar code on your book is your ticket to retail sales, and the prolific use of bar codes has resulted in reduced labor costs, improved inventory control, a speedier purchasing process, and improved customer service for bookselling and all of retail. Until recently, however, many books had to be marked on the back cover with two different bar codes—a Bookland EAN bar code (encoding the ISBN) and a UPC bar code (encoding the UPC)—to meet the needs of different markets.

 

From its inception, the presence of dual bar codes has been a source of complication in databases and of confusion in the supply chain, leading to delays at point of sale, missing sales information, and lost reorders.

 

To tackle this set of problems, the Book Industry Study Group (BISG) recently created a new Policy Statement advocating the elimination of dual bar codes on physical books and related products. Guidance as to which identifier—ISBN or UPC—is recommended for assignment is included in the statement. For example, it recommends ISBN for maps and UPC for calendars.

 

Help in Choosing Which Code to Use When

 

The elimination of dual bar codes is now possible because of the ISBN transition to ISBN-13 and because of GS1 U.S. initiatives (GS1 being the international organization whose goal is “to simplify global commerce by connecting the flow of information with the flow of goods,” with GS1 U.S. as its U.S. arm).

 

Technical details for the ISBN transition are available at www.bisg.org/isbn-13/index.html, and more information about GS1 U.S. can be found at www.gs1us.org/ean_ucc_system/stnds_and_tech/2005_sunrise.html. The point here is that ISBN and UPC numbers and bar codes have evolved into members of the same 13-digit identifier family: GTIN-13, formerly EAN-13. For the first time, the two previously incompatible product identifiers are now compatible, and all retailers should be capable of handling either one. In other words, it’s now possible to eliminate the costly confusion associated with dual bar codes.

 

The BISG Statement, “Elimination of Dual Identifiers on Books and Related Products” (BISG Policy Statement POL-0701), is designed to help publishers use only one bar code on each product intended for retail sale by booksellers and other retailers in the United States by noting which identifier—ISBN (bar coded with a Bookland EAN) or UPC (bar coded with a UPC-12)—is recommended for a given product or class of product. Recommendations for more than 15 different classes of products— including greeting cards, books in Braille, mixed media, maps, calendars, and printed music—are incorporated in it.

 

BISG recommends implementing the Policy Statement as soon as practical, with a target date for new publications or products no later than March 31, 2008.

 

The complete statement about using just one bar code—including the recommendations for specific kinds of products—is available at www.bisg.org/documents/policies.html.

 

Angela Bole is the associate director of the Book Industry Study Group, Inc. (BISG). She can be reached at angela@bisg.org or 646/336-7141.


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