Archive for the ‘APM Faq’ Category

What are BIC Discount Codes

Monday, December 7th, 2009

The discount group codes are used by wholesalers and retailers for the exchange of information with publishers and distributors about discounts given. At their request BIC has defined and administers a standard method of communicating publishers’ discount group codes as part of an EDI or ONIX message. A discount group code, which is an attribute of a product, is converted to an actual discount rate by means of a look-up table which is specific to an individual trading agreement and which is communicated directly between the trading partners by non-EDI/ONIX means.
All BIC-assigned discount group codes begin with the letter A, followed by a four-letter alphabetic code which identifies the publisher or issuer of the code, and are listed on the BIC web site. To ensure uniqueness, it is essential that codes assigned are notified to BIC immediately and updated on a regular basis. If new codes are not being notified, there is no guarantee that the codes in the published list are in fact unique. Codes are not deleted when they cease to be used (e.g. when a publisher moves distribution from one company to another) and should not be reused or reassigned, as this may cause problems elsewhere in the supply chain.

It is clear that not all distributors and publishers are following this guidance at present; and they are encouraged to inform BIC of all codes currently in use as a matter of urgency.

Full details of the scheme and the current list of codes can be found at http://www.bic.org.uk/13/Discount-Group-Codes/.

Error 25 when importing JPEG image

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

You will see an error 25 when attempting to import a JPEG image (.jpg) into Anko Publishing Manager if the image has been saved with a CMYK format. To successfully import the image re-save the JPEG image file with an RGB format and re-import the image file.

Nielsen Initial Notes on ONIX 3.0 Submissions in Q1 2010

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

ONIX 3.0

Notes for senders of ONIX 3.0 files to Nielsen Book, October 2009

Nielsen are working towards acceptance of ONIX 3 files from suppliers while continuing to accept series 2.* ONIX files for the foreseeable future. Our initial intention approach is to accommodate the variations and key additional elements in ONIX 3 into our existing database and products with minimal disruption. We will move to ONIX 3 outputs at a later stage in consultation with our data customers.

Work on ONIX 3 implementation is underway. We expect to be able to accept test files by the end of the year, and live files in Q1 2010.

Record Type “Block Updates”

In accordance with the statement of UK practice by the UK ONIX Group, Nielsen will accept EITHER Full Update Records as usual OR Block 6 (P&A updates) only, for initial implementation of ONIX 3; these may be mixed in the same file (the notification type is provided at record level) but we prefer separate files for each type.

Message Header

In accordance with the amended schema, Nielsen require ONIX3 files to include the mandatory ‘release’ attribute, with the value ‘3.0′ in the top-level element.

P5 Collection / P6 Product title detail

Nielsen will use Collection and Title data in existing fields on our database, and in products, to create well-formed title strings that avoid duplication of data.

P20 Global publishing status & dates / copyright

Nielsen will continue to recommend the statement of publishing status and publication date at item (global) level using P20, in addition to market-specific details as required. If a global publication date is not provided, we will use instead the market-specific date that matches the Country of Publication.

P21 Territorial rights and other sales restrictions

We are concerned about the introduced facility to state what rights DO NOT apply in a given territory with no requirement to state what rights DO apply. As we hold Rights information as a table, we need a clear indication of the situation (Non-Exclusive Rights, Exclusive Rights, or NFS) for each territory included.

We require senders, if using the “Countries Excluded” structure in a Sales right composite (eg Exclusive Rights for Word excluding US and Canada) to send an additional composite specifying the rights position for the excluding country/ies (eg NFS in US, non-exclusive rights in Canada, etc)

P22 Related works

Nielsen will expand our list of relation types to accommodate include links to Works identified by ISTC.

P24-26 Product Supply

We re-assert the position that met with general acceptance on a Listserv discussion in favour of mutually exclusive markets in Product Supply composites. Having overlapping markets (eg because one supplier serves two markets) is effectively organising the markets to fit the supplier. We can see this might be attractive for publishers, but for all recipients of the data, ie aggregators organising data for retailers in specific markets and retailers operating within specific territories, there is a strong requirement to receive all the supply data that is pertinent to a given market, including all suppliers to that market (rather than being presented with all markets that are served by each supplier).

Publishing Ireland Seminar

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

We are pleased to announce that we will be speaking at Publishing Irelands’ upcoming ‘Online Marketing, Onix, and Rights’ seminar.

Topic: Making Bibliographic ONIX data and XML work for you in the digital age

Our presentation is designed to explain and demystify ONIX and XML and demonstrate that, with a little XML knowledge and the right tools you can use XML data to create eBooks’, AIs, catalogues, fuel websites, generate press releases and marketing campaigns, provide rich, contemporary bibliographic title information for supply chain partners, thereby saving time, money, resources and increasing sales opportunities.

APM Image Storage

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

There are some important caveats to the holding of images within the Anko Publishing Manager (APM). APM uses the QuickTime technology to import or insert graphics, sounds, movies, or other multimedia files. QuickTime is installed by default as a component of Mac OS and Mac OS X. To install QuickTime on Windows, refer to www.apple.com/quicktime.

With QuickTime installed, you can import the following file types into a graphic field:

FlashPix (.FPX); GIF (GIF); JPEG/JFIF (JPG); MacPaint (MAC); PDF
(PDF, Mac OS X only); Photoshop (PSD); PICS (PCS); PICT (PCT);
PNG (PNFG); QuickTime Image File (QT); SGI (SGI); Targa (TGA);
TIFF (TIF); Windows bitmap (BMP)

Note - on Windows, FileMaker imports Windows bitmap (BMP), MacPaint (MAC, .PNT), and TIFF (TIF) files without using QuickTime.

File Types – Not suitable for importation Tiff files that have been saved from Adobe Photoshop with the LZW compression option selected cannot be imported. In addition, JPEG files saved with CMYK format will not import.

To import these files re-save the image file without the LZW compression. Tiff or JPEG files saved with a CMYK format on the Windows platform (but these files types are supported on Macs). The solution is to re-save the  file in RGB format.

How Do I Print Out a Schedule

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Completed Schedule Tasks

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

How to mark a task as complete in a schedule.

More Help with Searches

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

This a tutorial showing how you may find a sub set of titles from within a particular foundset. For example, if you wish to find all the titles from within a particular category from within your set of titles saved for Spring 2009.

Adding Publishers to your APM

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

You may add as many publishers as you need to your APM - This is how …

Adding People to Tasks

Monday, December 15th, 2008

If you would like to allocate internal staff to be responsible for schedule tasks then you need to first set them (as illustrated in the video above) up in the Contributor module as ‘In House’.