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ISBN Numbers




Because ISBN prices go down as you buy more. One is $125. One of ten is $25. One of a thousand is $1. Smashwords and CreateSpace buy by the ten thousands or more—and collect royalties from you. So the 10 cents or whatever they pay are negligible....

You cannot use the same ISBN for an e-book and for the print edition of the same book. Each format (e-book, paperback, hardcover, audio book, etc.) must have its own ISBN.




Try it out, I am not sure if you have to be from Canada.
Let me know how you make out
Tony

which offers individual ISBN numbers for $9.00 each (less if you buy more than one). Looks good to me. I'll let you know how I make out. Julie K.

http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/ci...
Tony

That's a good question. My guess is that so long as the offset printer and the POD printer are both producing the same kind of output (cloth or paper), that is one edition and one ISBN, just as one ePub file needs one ISBN whether it appears on the iBookstore, the Kobo Store, or even (through conversion) the Kindle Store.
But it might be worth asking the folks at Bowker or whatever your national agency is. If you find out otherwise, do let us know!

The disadvantage is that Smashwords or Createspace show up as the publisher. This highlights the fact that you are self published. Being self-published makes less of a difference these days, but for only $250, you can buy 10 of your own ISBNs, For $500 you can get 100, and for $1,000 you get a thousand. Check these prices, but I'm close.
So WHY would you want your own? Well, you have direct control over the description and pricing of the book. You can lower the price or raise it without having to ask Create Space or others to change this information for you. Granted, some outfits let you it directly. But I was able to change the name of my publishing company from Lightfoot Productions (which I've used for multimedia locally for years) to New Meme Media. I didn't lost my identity -- I kept the same ISBNs.
You may as well buy up a bunch of ISBNs. They are a real mark of credibility, and they let you have a ebook version, print version, large print version and so on. I have a color version of one of my books. Very pricey, but I wanted to give it to friends and family as a special gift. So I did burn an ISBN.
One last note, a bit off topic, when I created a Create Space "Library Edition" of my book, I lowered the price to help sell it to libraries. I have a soft spot in my heart for them. But I was surprised to see it show up, at a lower price, on Amazon. I had deliberately unchecked the box to distribute to Amazon and the other usual retail outlets--but it showed up anyway. (The Doggone Christmas List has two versions, and The Stupid Minivan THREE - all have different ISBNs.)
So I had do take the price back up on the library edition so as not to undercut myself.
Hope this helps. Bowker is the sole supplier for US ISBNs, and they are great to deal with. I received prompt and courteous service even though I'm small potatoes. I also am able to be a PUBLISHER (think tax advantages) and can create different identities with PRODUCT Lines. My humor is an "imprint," Or So It Seems. I plan an academic books with the same publisher but a different Imprint. You can do this easily at Bowker by just filling in a box and requesting they add an imprint. No cost. Takes a day. So if you write kids books, mystery and so on, you can differentiate your books with a different imprint. Check out the front of most print books, and you'll see the children's books are imprints of a bigger outfit. Emulate this to good effect.
Robb

Julie wrote: "Hi, Everybody--here's a site I just found http://www.epubbud.com/isbn.php
which offers individual ISBN numbers for $9.00 each (less if you buy more than one). Looks good to me. I'll let you know..."

I should have known you'd know, CP. That's my thought: the content is the same. It's just a different manufacturer. You don't need a new ISBN if you switch presses, right? This would be like using two different presses to manufacture the same book.


I concur. As a Canadian I have already obtained two just to get a headstart while promoting my book on sites like GR and others. It is not required, but nice to have. I know when uploading a book on GR for example, you leave the field blank if there is no ISBN (or you don't have one yet) as many books out there are produced as books and sold but in a business sense are more or less crafts than anything. They are printed pages and bound, nothing more. GR accepts this, as it's not a book seller site. (However, who knows--Amazon's involvement might make this a priority later on. For now, it's not.)

The content, yes, but more important, the format is the same. You need a new ISBN for each format: hardcover, trade paperback, mass-market paperback (if any), audiobook, e-book. I don't see why you would need a new ISBN to print the exact same book format at a different printer, but I don't know for sure....

When we get a little closer, I'll contact Bowker and see if I can get guidance from them. But I'm thinking our guess is correct.



Hi Lianne
I have published a few ebooks and we use the same ISBN for .mobi and .epub files. I think the recommendation is to have one ISBN per format but we have found that one ISBN for ebooksand one ISBN for paperbacks works fine. Good luck.


Each has advantages. Since there is NO charge for Smashwords, there's no risk to upload to meatgrinder and format your book. If money's an issue, I'd give SmashWords a try. If you don't want to hassle formatting, and can spare $100, go with Bookbaby. Either will get you into all the ebook retailers.

Robb, I recommend Smashwords to all the independent authors who come my way, however (and on my blog posts on this subject). If you're new to it all, it's an excellent way to avoid all the business hassles I must deal with! Not to mention, the endless hours I spend with Indesign designing our books to look nice. I outsource the ebook conversions to a contractor who does hand-coding so they still look good. But I've fallen down on the follow-up with all the varied retailers and their individual needs, and I have not gotten much hand-holding from Ingram/CoreSource ebook division (never will; they don't work that way). So I'm still interested in anyone's feedback/experience about using different ISBNs for the two formats: .epub and .mobi, both of which I have out in the marketplace for each book. Appreciate your input on this, Christopher! Thank you both!

The Bowker site does say you need a separate ISBN for the MOBI and ePub formats. Devorah is right about that.
The complication is that you can upload an ePub file to Kindle Direct Publishing, so long as you have not applied DRM, and KDP will convert it for sale (and apply DRM, if you so request). So is that one format or two?
I have always assumed one. And Folium Book Studio, from which I purchased the e-ISBN, also treats the e-book as one file uploaded to different sites and requiring one ISBN.
I would guess that if you, as the publisher, create separate ePub and MOBI files and sell them, then you might need two—to be safe, if nothing else. But I am not an expert in this area, so I would suggest checking with the people at Bowker to be sure.
And do let us know what you find out!

Related question: I'm planning to reissue my novel with a new cover. New ISBN or no? I think the librarians said I should use a new ISBN but I don't want readers who bought the first edition to feel like they were hoodwinked into buying the same book with a revised cover thinking it was a completely new book. Espec. as I'll be following that reissue with a sequel which IS a completely new book.

I'm new at Goodreads. Can someone please tell me if I can use one ISBN on five different self-publishing e-book web sites w/out buying five different ISBNs?
Thank you all,
Dave"
Not too sure what you're asking. An ISBN is merely a code given to a version of a book. So, since my books come out in different formats, the hardback as one ISBN, the trade paperback has another, and then there are two more for the mass-market UK and mass-market US versions.
In other words, if it's the same book, it's the same ISBN. If they're different versions, they have different ISBNs.
Does that help?

They ranted a bit about people creating all sorts of fake ISBNs, or "e-ISBN"s, which actually don't exist, and basically threw up their hands and said they'd been issuing these numbers since the early 1960s, when books were paper only and needed tracking through all their handlers -- distributors, wholesalers, retailers, publishers, libraries, etc. They admitted it's all a confusing mess right now, and they sounded like their system might go down with much of the rest of the archaic publishing industry, to be replaced by something new. DOI? (Digital Object Identifiers?) That's where I stopped reading; DOI was too much for me!
So, I've done a little math and realized that my next 10-ISBN purchase will stretch for 5 books if I set a policy of using only two ISBNs: One for paper and one for ebook (.epub, which does go out into the marketplace in many places). Not sure what I'll do when I upload my programmed .mobi files to Kindle; but I know ISBN is not required there, and certainly not for my record-keeping. I did publish one hardcover plus ebooks, no paperback; but if I routinely published in hardcover and paperback and 2 ebook formats -- whew. I'd rather conserve on the pricey ISBN numbers I'd have to purchase.
Don't know if this helps anyone -- but it's pretty much a mess in the marketplace right now. Do your best to make your book(s) findable!


(And no, I don't know how that is done. I just supply the files. Mine are based on ISSN plus unique identifying numbers, though.)

Related question: I'm planning to reissue my novel ..."
From a GR policy perspective.
If a book with an ISBN is republished with a new cover but no ISBN then a alternate cover edition is created with NO ISBN in the isbn fields. It is noted in the description . The ISBN remains with the first book published and the first cover published

Related question: I'm planning to r..."
And if it's published with a new cover but the "old" ISBN?

Related question: I'm..."
I missed the word new out in my msg above
If a book with an ISBN is republished with a new cover but no NEW ISBN then a alternate cover edition is created but NO ISBN in the isbn fields. The ISBN is noted in the description . The ISBN remains with the first book published and the first cover published

http://www.selfpublishedauthor.com./g...



Yup, got that. Thanks.

All of this hinges on the ISBN system staying in place--otherwise you're stuck with an expensive cache of numbers.

The Website has a lot of good information on it. Thanks for sharing.

Good to know. Thanks!
And yes, a very useful site.

Hi
I am a Canadian in England - I think you have to be living in Canada t use this site.
Books mentioned in this topic
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Can anyone recommend a site?