Intelligence for the network
WorldCat Registry centralizes data essential for delivering content and services more efficiently on the Web
By Bob Murphy
In January 2007, OCLC will launch the WorldCat
Registry, a global directory for libraries, consortia, archives
and museums and the services they provide. The Registry
will help these institutions manage and share data that define
their organizations—such as institution type, location, URLs
for electronic services, circulation statistics and population
served—through a single, authoritative Web platform.
Profile data in the Registry will support end-user access to
a number of OCLC services, including FirstSearch, the open-Web version of WorldCat, and others. Later, as the Registry
service expands, details such as branch library locations will
enhance the ability of WorldCat on the open Web to connect
users to the nearest library that holds an item—another step
closer to making all libraries’ holdings discoverable through
WorldCat.
The Registry also helps solve an increasingly common
administrative burden for libraries and library groups: keeping
multiple institutional identities up to date across different
internal and third-party applications and through a variety of
methods, including Web interfaces, faxed paper forms and
phone calls.
“Libraries, consortia and electronic content vendors all need
to maintain current files of information such as computernetwork
IP addresses, local administrative contacts and size said Celeste Feather, Electronic
Resources Librarian at The Ohio State University Libraries. “The problem for libraries is that they are expected to maintain
this information in many places if they want to ensure reliable
service. Vendors also need an efficient way to maintain
this information in their systems.”
“A centralized database such as the WorldCat Registry for
this type of information would facilitate efficient sharing of
critical information among many interested parties. If widely
adopted, the registry service could provide a solution to a
difficult workflow issue for librarians,” said Feather.
Any institution or consortium—OCLC members and nonmembers
alike—can use the Registry to share its profile with
other libraries, technology vendors, e-content providers, funding
agencies and other parties that could benefit from access.
A Registry profile is shared via a special Web link that provides
instant, read-only access to the most current data.
OCLC has prepopulated the Registry with automatically
generated profiles for its member institutions and many
others outside the cooperative. Upon release, the Registry
will be the most comprehensive source of library and library
service data in the world.
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