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WorldCat.org : Overview
Overview"The statistics...leave little doubt that OCLC's move to the free Web is a step in the right direction...The smart money is on [search engines] and libraries determining how to co-exist while...making each other better."—Searcher Magazine, Nov.-Dec. 2006 The Internet is the first choice for most information seekers. With your holdings and other metadata contributed to WorldCat, WorldCat.org makes your library's resources more visible to more people on the Web. Your reliable, verified information and personal assistance—the hallmarks of the library experience—gain greater exposure, credibility and use among people in your community and around the world. And you better meet the needs of Internet-savvy users who are no longer concerned with where information "lives" or who owns it, only that they can get to it quickly. Opened to the Web, your data works harder to attract usersWorldCat.org is the centerpiece of a platform for "Web-scale" discovery of library materials that moves information seekers from far-flung Internet locales into its simple search interface and through to local collections and services. Your WorldCat holdings data is made open and accessible to the sites people really use, and to Web technologies that let them interact with and contribute to it. Integration with key Web search sitesIn partnership with OCLC, Google, Yahoo! and many other sites index WorldCat records for millions of popular items as well as unique items held by individual institutions. Among their search results for regular Web content, a Web user finds links to WorldCat.org information about library materials, based on key words in their originating search.
A destination site that can be added to users' array of Web workspacesLinks on partner sites lead to a WorldCat.org item record page, where many users first encounter the tools that let them judge a resource's merits, find local or regional libraries that own it, and begin to incorporate "libraries" into their Web-searching thought processes.
Open approach spreads WorldCat information aroundBest of all, as an open system WorldCat makes your resources much more mobile: Data about your holdings and links to your services are distributed farther and wider on the Web, where new audiences discover them. Any person, business or organization can mix WorldCat data into their own Web sites, Web-enabled environments such as e-learning courses, or Web-application hybrids (also known as "mashups").
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