Information Industry

The Information sector comprises establishments engaged in the following processes:

(a) producing and distributing information and cultural products,
(b) providing the means to transmit or distribute these products as well as data or communications, and
(c) processing data

The main components of this sector are the publishing industries, including software publishing, and both traditional publishing and publishing exclusively on the Internet; the motion picture and sound recording industries; the broadcasting industries, including traditional broadcasting and those broadcasting exclusively over the Internet; the telecommunications industries; Web search portals, data processing industries, and the information services industries.

The expressions "information age" and "global information economy" are used with considerable frequency today. The general idea of an "information economy" includes both the notion of industries primarily producing, processing, and distributing information, as well as the idea that every industry is using available information and information technology to reorganize and make themselves more productive.

For the purpose of NAICS, it is the transformation of information into a commodity that is produced and distributed by a number of growing industries that is at issue. The Information sector groups three types of establishments: (1) those engaged in producing and distributing information and cultural products; (2) those that provide the means to transmit or distribute these products as well as data or communications; and (3) those that process data. Cultural products are those that directly express attitudes, opinions, ideas, values, and artistic creativity; provide entertainment; or offer information and analysis concerning the past and present. Included in this definition are popular, mass-produced, products as well as cultural products that normally have a more limited audience, such as poetry books, literary magazines, or classical records.

The unique characteristics of information and cultural products, and of the processes involved in their production and distribution, distinguish the Information sector from the goods-producing and service-producing sectors. Some of these characteristics are:

  1. Unlike traditional goods, an "information or cultural product," such as a newspaper on-line or television program, does not necessarily have tangible qualities, nor is it necessarily associated with a particular form. A movie can be shown at a movie theater, on a television broadcast, through video-on-demand or rented at a local video store. A sound recording can be aired on radio, embedded in multimedia products, or sold at a record store.
  2. Unlike traditional services, the delivery of these products does not require direct contact between the supplier and the consumer.
  3. The value of these products to the consumer lies in their informational, educational, cultural, or entertainment content, not in the format in which they are distributed. Most of these products are protected from unlawful reproduction by copyright laws.
  4. The intangible property aspect of information and cultural products makes the processes involved in their production and distribution very different from goods and services. Only those possessing the rights to these works are authorized to reproduce, alter, improve, and distribute them. Acquiring and using these rights often involves significant costs. In addition, technology is revolutionizing the distribution of these products. It is possible to distribute them in a physical form, via broadcast, or on-line.
  5. Distributors of information and cultural products can easily add value to the products they distribute. For instance, broadcasters add advertising not contained in the original product. This capacity means that unlike traditional distributors, they derive revenue not from sale of the distributed product to the final consumer, but from those who pay for the privilege of adding information to the original product. Similarly, a directory and mailing list publisher can acquire the rights to thousands of previously published newspaper and periodical articles and add new value by providing search and software and organizing the information in a way that facilitates research and retrieval. These products often command a much higher price than the original information.

The distribution modes for information commodities may either eliminate the necessity for traditional manufacture, or reverse the conventional order of manufacture-distribute: A newspaper distributed on-line, for example, can be printed locally or by the final consumer. Similarly, it is anticipated that packaged software, which today is mainly bought through the traditional retail channels, will soon be available mainly on-line. The NAICS Information sector is designed to make such economic changes transparent as they occur, or to facilitate designing surveys that will monitor the new phenomena and provide data to analyze the changes.

Many of the industries in the NAICS Information sector are engaged in producing products protected by copyright law, or in distributing them (other than distribution by traditional wholesale and retail methods). Examples are traditional publishing industries, software and directory and mailing list publishing industries, and film and sound industries. Broadcasting and telecommunications industries and information providers and processors are also included in the Information sector, because their technologies are so closely linked to other industries in the Information sector.

The Information Industry has a two-digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code of 51. Its subcategories are as follows:

 

NAICS Code NAICS Title
511 Publishing Industries (except Internet)
511110   Newspaper Publishers
511120   Periodical Publishers
511130   Book Publishers
511140   Directory and Mailing List Publishers
511191   Greeting Card Publishers
511199   All Other Publishers
511210   Software Publishers
 
512 Motion Picture and Sound Recording Industries
512110   Motion Picture and Video Production
512120   Motion Picture and Video Distribution
512131   Motion Picture Theaters (except Drive-Ins)
512132   Drive-In Motion Picture Theaters
512191   Teleproduction and Other Postproduction Services
512199   Other Motion Picture and Video Industries
512210   Record Production
512220   Integrated Record Production/Distribution
512230   Music Publishers
512240   Sound Recording Studios
512290   Other Sound Recording Industries
 
515 Broadcasting (except Internet)
515111   Radio Networks
515112   Radio Stations
515120   Television Broadcasting
515210   Cable and Other Subscription Programming
 
517 Telecommunications
517110   Wired Telecommunications Carriers
517210   Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite)
517410   Satellite Telecommunications
517911   Telecommunications Resellers
517919   All Other Telecommunications
 
518 Data Processing, Hosting, and Related Services
518210   Data Processing, Hosting, and Related Services
 
519 Other Information Services
519110   News Syndicates
519120   Libraries and Archives
519130   Internet Publishing and Broadcasting and Web Search Portals
519190   All Other Information Services

 

Information courtesy of the U.S. Census Bureau.