10 Things You Should Know About the ISBN
- ISBN stands for International Standard Book Number and is a 13-digit number that identifies published books. Once assigned to a book, an ISBN can never be reused.
- There are five parts to an ISBN number – the current prefix of 978 or 979, the registration group (country), the registrant element (publisher), the publication element (title and format) and the check digit.
- WHSmith, the largest book retailer in Great Britain, launched the Standard Book Numbering (SBN) system in 1967 as a way to organize books in its new computerized warehouse.
- The International ISBN Agency, located in London, is the registration authority for the ISBN system worldwide.
- An ISBN identifies the registrant, title, edition and format of products used by publishers, bookstores, libraries, etc. and is important for ordering, sales reporting and inventory control. An ISBN increases the chances that your book will be found.
- Most bookstores will not feature or sell any book that is not first listed within their warehouse database. To get there, your book must have a unique ISBN.
- ISBNs were 10 digits in length until 2007, when they expanded to 13 digits.
- The single digit last number is the check digit, which now ranges from 0 to 9. The former 10-digit ISBN check digit ranged from 1 to 10. In cases where a 10 was needed, the Roman numeral X was used.
- The ISBN does not provide any form of legal or copyright protection. However, some countries legally require the use of an ISBN to identify publications.
Get Your Digits
All Media City Publishers packages include an ISBN assignment plus much more. Learn more by calling to claim your free publishing guide now.