ISBN, CIP, Copyrights and BarcodesCopyright Page Content
ISBN
CIP
Library of Congress (LCC) number (USA)
Copyright
Copyright Date
Barcodes
Barcode Information
Copyright Page Content:
The copyright page is the page that follows your main
title page and is where you display the legal part of your book. Be
sure to check several books in your category and see what they are
using on their copyright page and determine what is best for yours.
Also be sure to check with your legal representative for correct use
etc. The examples below are for suggestion only.
Here is a sample of the basics of what your copyright page should contain:
Book Title Book Sub-title Author Name
Copyright © 20 _ _ (publisher or author)
All
rights reserved. Except as permitted under U.S.
Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced,
distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, orstored in a
database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of
the publisher.
Publishers address and contact information Visit our website at www.xxxxxxxxx.com.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data (if you have filed for this)
ISBN-10: 0-0000000-0-0 ISBN-13: 000-0-0000000-0-0
Printed in (the United States of America) or (Canada) or
Book Design by (designer name) Photos by
Cover photo by
Editing by or other
First Edition: (date by month and year) 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Other items you might include:
1. Disclaimer for legal purposes for coaches, doctors etc. 2. Special credits for use of quoted work or other... 3. Other forms of publication ISBNs. (CDs, paperback, hardcover, audio book, etc.)
Several Alernatives to above:
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in
a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise
excetp as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States
Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the
Publisher or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy
fee to the _______(your company or distributor info) _______, or on the
web at _____(your website)_____. Requests to the Publisher for
permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department______(your
info here)______.
==================
No Part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in
a retrieval system, or transmitted in any for form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or
otherwise, except a permitted under Section 107c or 108 of the 1976
United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written
permission of the Author/Publisher. Requests to the Author/Publisher
for permission should be addressed to ---------(fill in your info here)
-------------
==================
Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty
Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the
publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this
book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the
accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically
disclaim any implied warranties or merchantability or fitness for a
particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales
representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies
contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should
consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher
nor author shall be liable for any loss or profit or any other
commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental,
consequential, or other damages.
For general information on our other products and
services or for technical support please contact -----(your info
here)------------------
================
Disclaimer
Disclaimer: This publication is designed to provide
accurate and personal experience information in regard to the subject
matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the author,
contributors, publisher are not engaged in rendering counseling or
other professional services. If counseling advice or other expert
assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person
should be sought out.
=================
Medical Disclaimer:
The information contained in this book is not intended
to serve as a replacement for professional medical advice. Any use of
the information in this book is at the reader's discretion. The author
and publisher specifically disclaim any and all liability arising
directly or indirectly from the use or application of any information
contained in this book. A health care professional should be consulted
regarding your specific situation.
ISBN
Look on the back cover or open any paper bound book to
the second or
third page, often referred to as the copyright page, and you will
usually find an ISBN (International Standard Book Number). An ISBN is
required if you plan to
sell paper books or CD's to bookstores, libraries, and many specialty
retailers. If you obtain the ISBN under your name, you own it. If it is
obtained for you by someone else using their name as the publisher,
they are the owners on record.
If you intend to sell only e-books and not paper bound
books, you may be able to get by without including an ISBN number.
However, you may run into resellers who insist that even your e-books
have an ISBN.
Each format that you publish your book through will
require its own
ISBN. In other words, the paper book will have one ISBN, the e-book
another, and the CD yet another. Do not use the same ISBN assigned to
your paper books when marketing your e-books. Otherwise you
will end up with some confused and unhappy customers.
Cost for ISBN prefixes in the United States is around
$250. In Canada
it is free. The agencies which handle ISBN registration are:
R.R. Bowker
(U.S.A.)
Library and Archives Canada
CIP
A Cataloguing in Publication record (aka CIP data) is a
bibliographic
record for a book that has not yet been published. When the book is
published, the publisher includes the CIP data on the copyright page
thereby facilitating book processing for libraries and book dealers.
The purpose of the Cataloguing in Publication (CIP)
program is to serve
libraries by cataloguing books in advance of publication. It is not a
requirement for your book, but worthwhile if you want libraries to be
notified of it's existence.
For more information and application forms for
CIP data see:
CIP
(U.S.A.)
CIP (Canada)
Library of Congress (LCC) number (USA)
A Library of Congress number is not necessary to market
your ebooks.
Having LCC numbers for paper bound books was once thought to help
increase sales to libraries. I've heard some publishers say it won't
make much difference. Cost of acquiring an LCC is free. For services
available to publishers in getting an LCC number or in relation to the
Library of Congress, visit: Library of Congress
Copyright
Copyright is the legal protection of your original
intellectual
property. You cannot copyright ideas or book titles, only content such
as books, stories, poetry, music and movies. According to law, your
material becomes protected as soon as it is created and available for
viewing.
A procedure not involving registration and still used by
some authors
is to send it by registered mail to yourself, and never open the
package. If anyone were to try to steal your ideas in the future, the
postmarked package of your book would show that you thought of it
first.
Whenever you ask someone for a testimonial or you wish
to quote from
another author's words, you will need their signed permission before
you can legally publish those words in your ebooks, marketing materials
or web site. Otherwise, the person can sue you for infringement.
Although registering a copyright for certain types of
books may be
recommended, legally, copyright exists from the moment your work is
created. Registering with the U.S. Copyright Office is necessary,
however, if you wish to sue someone for infringement of your material.
Cost for registering a copyright is $30 per book.
If you wish to register, registration in Canada or the
U.S. is fairly
straightforward. Visit the Canadian Copyright Office
or the U.S.
Copyright Office for registration information, forms and
fees.
For information on how copyright and other issues affect
you from a
legal standing, see
http://www.copylaw.com
or the U.S.
Copyright Office
Another excellent site with free
reports on publishing law is
ivanhoffman.com.
Copyright Date
by John Kremer
The date of publication on your copyright page can be your
off-press date, your shipping date, or your publication date. It is your choice
what date of publication you put on that copyright form. For legal purposes, the
earliest date is probably the best if you want maximum copyright protection. But
there is one situation where you would want to have a later copyright date. If
your book comes off the press in November, you might still want to set a
copyright date for January so your books doesn't look dated in two months.
People (reviewers, booksellers, rights buyers) do pay attention to the copyright
date in a book. If they receive a book in January 2002 with a 2001 copyright
date, the book will appear as if it were already a year old. Not
good.
Don't set an artificial publication date just for the benefit of
Publishers Weekly and other big guns. Set a publication date that
actually makes sense for your book. The publication date should be that date
when your book should receive its major national publicity, advertising, and
distribution in bookstores. If you want publicity in major monthly magazines,
you'll have to set a publication date that is at least six months from the time
you send them review copies (or, better yet, galley copies).
Ideally, bookstores nationwide should get a book about 10 days
to two weeks before publication date. Some bigger publishers, of course, have a
nationwide laydown date for major books, but smaller publishers shouldn't worry
about trying to coordinate such a one-day laydown. The main reason you don't
want your book in bookstores too early is that some bookstores return books if
they don't sell within six weeks to three months.
Setting a national publication date six months out doesn't mean
you can't do local author events, sell through local bookstores, or do direct
mail campaigns to targeted groups beforehand. In many cases, I would recommend
that you do some local events before publication date to help get your author
into the swing of things (i.e., get them experience answering media questions
and doing bookstore events).
While your publication date is, in some sense, fiction, don't
think of it that way. Use your publication date as a focal point for all your
efforts in giving your book a good launch. Then, after that, ignore the
publication date and continue to do promotion for years to come. The books that
have become bestsellers for smaller publishers have primarily made the lists
because of on-going promotional efforts from their authors and publishers
and good word of mouth. And most have done so months or years after the
publication date.
Barcodes
On the back cover of every book or CD available through
bookstores or
libraries are barcodes. Although downloadable ebooks will not require
a barcode, CD's and printed books will. Barcode labels are
electronically scanned at the checkout counters as a way of saving time
from punching in numbers. There are several types of barcoding formats.
For selling to bookstores, the EAN - Bookland format is used.
I will produce a barcode from your ISBN number (and your book price) as part
of the book
production job.
Barcode Information
The first three digits of the Bookland EAN, 978, are
given to every ISBN to uniquely identify the barcode as a book or book
related product. The next nine digits of the EAN consist of the ISBN
(minus the check digit). Finally, a new check digit will be calculated
for your EAN, which is based on the first 12 digits of the EAN number.
The ISBN is printed above the barcode so that it can be manually
entered, if needed.

Price Code: The
five digit add-on encodes the suggested retail price of your book into
the barcode. In the United States, the first digit of the add-on is the
number 5, which indicates U.S. dollars. A number 4 would indicate
Canadian dollars. The remaining 4 digits encode the price without
decimals. If the price is greater than $99.99, the add-on should remain
as 59999. If there is not a set price, a code of 90000 tells the
computer that there is no suggested retail price associated with the
EAN code.
The price add on bar is not absolutely necessary, but most bookstores prefer to see one.
Price add on with price of $10.95
Your book’s ISBN is 0-123456-47-9 and retails for $10.95
Your EAN will be 9780123456472 with a price add on code of 51095

Price add on with no set price
Your books ISBN is 0-123456-47-9 and does not have a set price
Your EAN will be 9780123456472 with a price add on code of 90000
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