Is it time to
revise the manner in which the publishing industry establishes standards for the
industry? The pace at which the industry is moving suggests that the model of
serial committee meetings staffed by over worked volunteers may no longer be an
optimal solution.
Into a vacuum does a 'standard' establish itself and I
believe the RFID situation in the library community is just one example. In the
absence of a universal approach to RFID tagging in the publishing and library
community we now have several vendor specific 'standards' that mitigate some or
all of the benefits of the technology itself. Time to deliberate and debate ad
nausea is a luxury we can't afford when digital content and transaction models
are changing rapidly, so I was interested to see the following comment from BISG regarding digital
content:
“The
committee will work to find solutions that will benefit the entire book industry
– publishers, retailers, search engines, authors, wholesalers and distributors –
by improving the process by which online book content reaches consumers. To
expedite standards development at a time when the book industry is moving
rapidly forward, the Committee will start its work using a briefing paper,
requirements, and draft specification that were developed within the Association
of American Publishers (AAP) to serve as frameworks for further
work.”
It will be
interesting to see how this develops; however, just making the old system work
faster may not be enough. An alternative approach could be to establish a
forward thinking (anticipatory) approach to new standards development.
Importantly, a small 'reconnaissance' team that sits permanently could identify
new standards needs and establish a minimalist framework for these new
standards. This framework could include the identification of less than 10 data
elements and with definitions that would immediately enable standardization at a
very basic level. This group would generate standards projects based on
submissions from the community as well as from their own
initiatives.
Once the framework was completed the new born standard would
be published and passed on to the committee best suited to expand on it and
extend its relevance. In some cases, the standard could remain dormant and/or
industry participants could submit their own amendments and additions to the
standard rather than wait for the committee to define new data elements and
requirements.
Posted by: Michael Cairns, Information Media Partners