Next-gen cataloging
Moving metadata capture upstream to enhance technical services workflow
By Tom Storey
When Frederick G. Kilgour founded
OCLC in 1967, he saw libraries
across the U.S. doing the same,
repetitive tasks in cataloging—rooms full of typists
entering the same information on catalog
cards. The OCLC online union catalog (now
called WorldCat) and shared cataloging system dramatically reduced these inefficiencies by
making it unnecessary for more than one library
to originally catalog an item. Records in the
online union catalog could be shared and used
by others to produce catalog cards.
Today, the drive to streamline the cataloging
process continues. In December 2007, OCLC
rolled out an early prototype of its next generation
cataloging system in a field test involving
both libraries and publishers. The pilot will evaluate
the viability of metadata capture, creation
and enhancement using publisher/vendor ONIX
metadata. ONIX is a standard format that publishers
use to distribute electronic information
about their books to wholesale, e-tail and retail
booksellers. Metadata created and enhanced
will be output in MARC and ONIX for use in
library and publisher supply chain systems and
processes.
During the pilot, publisher and vendor partners
are providing title information in ONIX format.
OCLC will map the data to MARC and enrich
the new record by mining existing WorldCat
metadata and by data-mapping between existing
data elements. Library pilot partners will review
MARC data created from publisher ONIX for
quality and sustainability for use in library technical
services processes. MARC records created
during the pilot will be available for
library use in technical services
processes and library systems.
“It’s crucial to the future of
cataloging to find collaborative
ways to take advantage of publisher
ONIX metadata and find
efficient and centralized ways to
store, enhance and normalize the
metadata for the benefit of both
library and publishing communities,”
says Renee Register, Global
Product Manager, OCLC Cataloging
and Metadata Services.
Right now, Register says, many libraries are
tackling this on their own by developing ingest
and manipulation of ONIX data as part of their
cataloging processes. “We find ourselves again
in the position of creating local solutions and
duplicating effort across the library community
to handle metadata for the same set of titles
published each year.
“Finding ways to streamline this process would
certainly result in cost savings and workflow
efficiencies as well as greater upstream availability
of metadata for use in library technical processing
and end-user interfaces.
“There is also duplication of effort and expense
in the creation and enhancement of metadata
across the publisher supply chain. Cooperative
work in this area will only enhance the metadata
we all use.”
The pilot will run through June 2008.
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