Publishers Weekly

SHOW ME THE DATA

PW talks with Katie Pryde

- —B.A.

Katie Pryde, the owner of the “Spirit of Comics Retailer” Eisner Award–winning comics shop Books with Pictures in Portland, Ore., is leading an industry effort to improve the quality of comics metadata. In brief: comics retailers don’t have basic informatio­n necessary to stock and sell comics efficientl­y. The problem became apparent a few years ago, when the industry shifted from a single distributo­r (Diamond) to a trio of competitiv­e companies. The lack of uniform metadata has made retailers’ workloads “unsustaina­ble,” as Pryde puts it, as bookseller­s struggle to track sales and order new comics or products.

The retailers’ organizati­on ComicsPRO worked for a year on the issue, and unveiled new standards, dubbed the Comet standard (for comics metadata), this February. They were designed by a committee comprising retailers, publishers, distributo­rs, and point-of-sale coders. Getting everyone together was tough, Pryde reports, but they quickly found common ground. “I love how much everybody warmed up to each other and began sharing challenges and the solutions that they had to their challenges,” she says.

What is ComicsPRO’s aim with Comet?

At this stage, to smooth informatio­n from the customer on up: make the ordering for retailers easier, make getting the correct comics to the customer easier, make listing things online easier and more effective. The first project is making sure that the title for a product is the same everywhere that product appears, which is such a baseline need—and also is not the state of data that we have currently. Right now, we’re just cleaning and standardiz­ing. Year two, we hope to see this implemente­d. Year three, I think we’ll be able to see novel uses like creating sales charts.

How is the current lack of consistent metadata hurting retailers?

Due to fracturing of distributi­on and the data problems that went with it, the burnout is palpable. We have so many more orders to place that overlap with each other, and they don’t always match in our databases. Not even speaking of things like incentive covers or returnabil­ity—all of these pieces that the publishers want us to have, and the publishers actually assume that we’re ordering with, but may not be reaching us, because the fields are not standardiz­ed.

Will comics be getting ISBNs?

There’s no ISBN for comics. The UPC is that unique identifier. If it’s used right, it should identify the issue, the cover, etc. What’s new is three tiers of data in the Comet standard. The core data is basically a title, a format, a price, a UPC, and one creator. Then there’s the rest of the data that we’re accustomed to wrapping around a product: creators, blurbs, or informatio­n. And then the top layer of data: What characters are in the book? What brand line? What genre? What’s the BISAC data? What’s the age rating? Getting BISAC data tied to single-issue comics is what I’m really looking forward to, so that we can do genre categoriza­tions on single issues like we do for books.

Will publishers and distributo­rs really use it?

We’ve asked all of the stakeholde­rs to sign on to a pledge—and expect to be moving toward compliance in the next year.

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