Classification Guidelines: ETIM International
Classification Guidelines: ETIM International
Classification Guidelines
V3-2020
Version date 14-12-2020
Authors: Marc Habets and Karl Pappas
CONTENT
CONTENT.............................................................................................................................................. 2
1. Introduction........................................................................................................................................ 5
2. Organization ...................................................................................................................................... 5
2.1. General ....................................................................................................................................... 5
2.2. Online Database and Service Portal ETIM CMT ................................................................. 6
2.3. Expert (working) groups ........................................................................................................... 7
2.4. Local ETIM organization .......................................................................................................... 8
2.4.1. Local national secretariats and/or -staff offices ............................................................ 8
2.4.2. Local language versions ................................................................................................... 8
2.5. Standardization Committee ..................................................................................................... 9
3. ETIM Classification Model ............................................................................................................ 10
3.1. Introduction .............................................................................................................................. 10
3.2. The model ................................................................................................................................ 11
3.2.1 ETIM basic model ................................................................................................................. 11
3.2.1 ETIM MC ................................................................................................................................ 12
3.3. Product groups and classes .................................................................................................. 12
3.4. Features ................................................................................................................................... 12
3.4.1. Basic features................................................................................................................... 12
3.4.2. Local standard features .................................................................................................. 13
3.5. Values ....................................................................................................................................... 13
3.6. Units .......................................................................................................................................... 13
3.7. Synonyms ................................................................................................................................ 14
4. Release format classification ........................................................................................................ 14
4.1. IXF format ................................................................................................................................ 14
4.2. Country specific formats ........................................................................................................ 18
4.3. ETIM API .................................................................................................................................. 18
4.4. Dynamic release ..................................................................................................................... 19
4.4. Metric versus imperial release .............................................................................................. 19
4.5. Release version notation ....................................................................................................... 21
ETIM offers an open standard for the unambiguous grouping and specification of products in the
technical sector through a uniform product classification model. This classification uses: product
classes, features, values and synonyms that make it easy to find the right product. The product
classification itself is no “final product” but offers a structure for an electronic product database and
applications such as an online web shop, search engine or configuration software. ETIM classification
is multilingual, media neutral and supplier neutral.
ETIM International is the international standardization committee for ETIM. The principal objectives
and activities are to develop, maintain, publish and promote the ETIM classification model. The long-
term goal of ETIM International is to achieve that the ETIM model becomes the most used technical
information model in the involved industries.
This document aims to provide with a brief framework to give formal guidelines on the organization as
well as for the content management and quality requirements of the classification work. With the
rapidly growing global interest and involvement it now becomes necessary to provide the fundament
for a proper ETIM organization, in particular one concept for the administration and one for the
technical administration of a uniform global ETIM model. To secure the uniform application and further
development of a common ETIM model, it will be necessary to specify basic rules.
This document replaces all previous versions of this document as well as all previously published
documents regarding classification guidelines in the respective member countries. Should a previously
published version or any other document conflict with this document, the regulation of this document
has priority.
2. Organization
2.1. General
Formal bodies
The association has the following formal bodies: The General Assembly, the Executive Board and the
Standardization Committee.
The General Assembly has full powers to achieve the objectives and to ratify the vision and strategy of
ETIM International. Each country has one vote in the General Assembly, which decides by majority.
The General Assembly is the highest formal body in the organization and will elect the Executive
Board to perform operational tasks, it can also set up policy groups and working groups. So ETIM
International shall be governed by an Executive Board in accordance with decisions reached by the
General Assembly.
The Executive Board is empowered to establish a Standardization Committee, of which the chairman
is appointed by the Board. This Committee will make proposals for the further development,
enhancement and maintenance of the ETIM model. The Standardization Committee is open to
technical experts from the members.
Membership
Full membership of ETIM International is open to recognised national ETIM Country Member
organizations as specified in the present statutes. In addition to Full Country Members, under certain
conditions we also allow Country Sector Members, where ETIM is represented by different
organizations for separate industry sectors. Finally, also Multi Country Membership (or regional
In addition to country membership, ETIM International has recently introduced a Global Industry
Membership, which is open to manufacturers, wholesalers, buying groups and contractors that are
already (and will remain) member of at least 5 different national ETIM Country organizations. Global
Industry Members have direct access to and participation in Standardisation Committee and expert
groups – alongside national ETIM organizations. Global Industry members do not have a vote in the
General Assembly.
Industry sectors
ETIM currently is used and has members representing the following sectors:
• Electrotechnical (coded as E in CMT)
• HVAC and plumbing (coded as W in CMT)
• Building materials (coded as B in CMT)
• Shipbuilding (coded as M in CMT)
• Tools, hardware and site supplies (coded as T in CMT)
Only the electrical sector is represented by all ETIM member countries. The ETIM membership
directory that you can find in the general download section on our public website has an overview of
active sectors per country.
These guidelines describe the organization of the international collaboration and decision making
regarding the ETIM classification. The organization and decision making within the national ETIM
organizations is organized separately, but harmonized with the international guidelines to avoid
conflicting stipulations.
CMT is the abbreviation for Classification Management Tool. It is a custom build online software tool
to access the international multilingual ETIM master database and to efficiently organize and process
additions and requests for change (RFCs) to the ETIM model. CMT is also the communication
medium for status updates on RFCs to the requester and other interested members. Members with
login can use a favourites filter to select on which classes they want to be informed, in case of RFCs
they receive a summary status update every week, this way the number of unwanted messages is
reduced to an absolute minimum. This update includes direct links to the online RFC in ETIM CMT to
view the complete request and/or to join the discussion on this request.
• Search, view and print ETIM classes in all available language versions; actual versions but
also previous versions. The complete and detailed class history is available (what has been
changed, by whom and when). Also reference products (pictures, product id, and links) can be
saved to make clear what products should be classified in a certain class.
• Versions of the same class can be compared with each other to easily view the changes
(using colours); it is also possible to compare different classes to each other to see what they
have in common.
• View all available entities in the master tables, such as groups, features, values, units,
synonyms; manage the translations if relevant and see in which classes these entities are
used.
• Selections filter to select and print or export groups of classes using all available parameters
as selection criteria. Members with login can save an indefinite number of selections to re-use
including their favourites selection as mentioned earlier. Selections can be exported in all
available export formats, like XML, CSV and Excel.
The expert groups (working groups) are the technical bodies in the standardization process. Expert
working groups can be organized locally or internationally.
Each country of ETIM International can organize and administrate the structure of own expert groups.
They check the content of the ETIM data model, develop own RFCs and check all external RFCs.
These proposals shall be prepared in the local language and in the system language ‘ETIM English’
(British English).
The expert groups are composed of representatives from the manufacturers, the wholesalers and
other relevant persons (associations, standards organizations …). Expert groups can have a meeting
at a national level or even cross-border. Usually, a representative of the relevant staff office should be
present.
During a meeting, an expert group will develop existing classes and features or create new classes
that are missing in the actual ETIM data model. It is recommended to take minutes to document the
result of a meeting for the future. The expert group works out a suggestion, the final solution and
decision is the responsibility of the ETIM Standardization Committee. The result of a meeting has to
be entered into the CMT to allow all ETIM members to evaluate the worked-out RFCs (especially the
ETIM Standardization Committee).
It is not always necessary to meet face-to-face; often it is enough to coordinate change requests by e-
mail, telephone or directly in CMT.
The ETIM SC has put in place some procedures to avoid overlapping or conflicting results from
parallel local expert group sessions. Requested, planned or active local expert groups are required to
be listed in the SC expert group board in Trello (collaboration tool to organize tasks and projects), so
they are visible to other countries that also have requirements for the same product group. When there
are expert groups active in multiple countries for the same product group, this expert groups board is
used to coordinate the efforts. In addition to the Trello board, each expert group can open a discussion
group on our community website, where discussion on specific topics is easily organized. This way we
manage to combine local expertise with international consensus in the most pragmatic and efficient
way.
International expert group meetings are difficult to organize (location and time) and involve high costs
(travelling) for those involved. So usually, expert group meetings are organized at local level and only
in exceptional cases on international level, if the issues at hand require this. We distinguish between
product working groups and general working groups.
The sector SC can initiate product working group meetings for product group related topics/issues, to
which they can invite Global Industry Members and/or relevant external experts. Preferably but not
necessarily these external experts are local ETIM members. Product working groups will be organized
as physical meeting only when deemed necessary, but can also be digital or online.
For topics that generally concern the ETIM standards, not related to a specific sector or product group,
general working groups can be started cross-sectoral. The SC coordination group can initiate general
working groups, whether or not requested by one of the sector SCs.
As mentioned in chapter 2.1 the organization of the national ETIM organizations is not centrally
defined. However, some guidelines are given by the statutes to the activities to be performed by the
national organizations. For the purpose of this document as technical guidelines we want to
distinguish here between administrative and political tasks as the responsibility of the national
secretariat on the one hand and technical tasks as the responsibility of the national staff offices on the
other hand. Depending on the national situation these two can be combined into one operational
service. In this document we will only focus on the technical tasks, for the rest we refer to the current
statutes.
• Organize the translation in local language(s) of the ETIM classification within the foreseen
time frame, see also more detailed information in chapter 2.4.2.
• Provide know-how and administrative support to expert groups (or individual members) that
are active in their country
• Receive local requests for change and perform a first evaluation for local approval or denial
• Enter approved local requests for change into the ETIM CMT tool and complete and/or check
the system language ‘ETIM English’ (British English) translations if necessary
• Act as the communication liaison between the local ETIM members and the international
organization regarding RFCs and other model issues
• Participate as empowered delegate in the Standardization Committee and the joined activities
regarding the model management and maintenance
• Participate actively in meetings and conferences organized by ETIM International concerning
the development and promotion of the ETIM classification system
• Organize the distribution of the latest version of ETIM to the local members and promote the
use of the latest version
• Avoid the creation of non-uniform versions by respecting the release plan of ETIM
International
The above activity descriptions are non-conclusive but are given to indicate the scope and the
responsibilities.
ETIM is an open standard and is available for free to everyone. This includes the coding structure and
the system language (‘ETIM English’), but NOT all local language versions. The following guidelines
apply to local translations:
• The local ETIM organization is responsible for and has ownership of the local ETIM language
version.
• Ownership concerns the file with translations that is prepared by the local ETIM organization.
It does not involve copyright in the sense that other parties would be prohibited to make their
own translations.
• ETIM International will always only accept and promote as official language version the one
produced by the local ETIM organization
• The local ETIM organization decides who can have access to their local language version.
ETIM International promotes the free availability of language versions, since our final goal
(having ETIM classified product data) is best served by that. But ETIM International also
understands that limiting access to language versions for ‘members only’ can help convince
companies to become a member, especially in the start-up-phase.
Open languages at this moment are ETIM English (our ‘system language’), Belgian-Flemish, Belgian-
French, Dutch, Finnish, German, Italian and Norwegian.
The ETIM Standardization Committee (SC) is the central body for all matters regarding the
standardization process and formally reports to the ETIM International board. It has a technical
supervision over the complete ETIM model. The SC will decide on all proposed RFCs (accept, rework,
reject) by using the CMT and can also submit proposals to the board for approval (for matters beyond
the model content). The board can ask the SC for advice in technical matters.
Each country- or global industry member designates one person (per active sector) as a member of
the SC, who is regarded as an ETIM technical expert. The Chairman of the SC shall be appointed by
the Executive Board.
The SC is the formal assembly of all SC members from all countries and sectors, but as an overall
committee they will only physically meet once a year.
For each active sector in ETIM a sector SC will be defined, that will be presided by a sector
coordinator. Since a sector SC will mostly focus on product related issues that are usually not of
interest to all members, they will usually not have general meetings. Instead, they will organize
product working group meetings. Representatives of sector SCs can also participate in general
working groups regarding issues on model structure etc.
Each sector SC will appoint 1 or 2 sector coordinators, who will take responsibility for the coordination
of the activities within their sector SC. These coordinators will also be part of the SC coordination
group, responsible for the overall coordination and organization within the SC.
SC coordination group
… …
Formal SC decisions will not be taken at physical SC meetings, but approval will always be organized
by digital/online voting. Each member (Global Industry Member or country) has one full vote. If
multiple sectors are involved per country, that are represented by different organizations, local
A transcript of each meeting has to be made, which will be communicated to the SC members and to
the ETIM International board. SC members are responsible for informing their national board.
If necessary, the SC works together with other relevant institutions and initiatives.
If an ETIM member does not agree with a decision of the Standardization Committee, he can raise an
objection to the ETIM International board. The objection has to be verbalised written in English and
has to include all information to enable a fast and precise final decision of the board members.
3.1. Introduction
No double work due to constantly having to manually re-enter information that was already there
electronically; Minimisation of failure costs of incorrect orders due to confusing or incorrect product
information; High quality of product data, which is even considered a strategic asset these days;
Optimal support of product data to numerous functional applications that use and rely on these data;
Efficient product data management; ….
International concept
The fundamental idea is the international use of one identical standard ETIM model. The integration of
the ETIM structure in the product information management systems of international companies gives
suppliers and wholesalers a strategic option to standardize the flow of data and exchange the product
information between different countries for all available products.
The ETIM Classification model is built using the following categories or entities:
• Product groups
• Product classes
• Synonyms (Keywords)
• Features
• Values
• Units
All classes, features, values and units have a clear and unique identifier that is language-independent;
the description of the entities however is language-dependent.
ETIM MC is described in separate documentation (format and guidelines) and is for now considered
out of scope for this document.
The ETIM model is a two-level classification model. The two levels consist of the product group and
product classes.
The product group is used to order the product classes. Every product class is assigned to exactly one
product group. Nevertheless, ETIM is organized flat, because the groups are only for the convenient
organization of the management of the product classes. Essential – and that is the real focus of ETIM-
is the definition of product classes and their features.
A product class describes similar products, bundles products of different manufacturers or suppliers;
all product classes have features to specify the technical characteristics of the products in the class,
the features of each class are ordered due to their importance and are also structured meaningful
(dimensions, features of electrical data, …).
3.4. Features
R – range = two numeric values that limit a range (interval) of values. The ETIM range feature is
considered to be a closed range, so an interval which includes all its limit points, mathematically
denoted as [a..b].
Each feature in ETIM is identified by a unique EF code and is clearly described by its description and
feature type. So, the feature type is fixed for each feature code. Features with the same description
(like “Nominal voltage”) but with a different feature type are identified with a different EF code.
A feature in ETIM does not have a standard unit (N, R) or value list (A). The unit or value list for a
feature is defined on class level and so can be different for each class where the feature is used.
Local standard features are features that refer to a local (national) standard, like for example “Circuit
integrity according to BS 6387 CWZ”, where BS is British Standard.
With already 20+ national ETIM organizations active in the ETIM development, the number of these
features in the (basic) ETIM model would ‘explode’, where most of them are only important locally. But
still these features are important and data suppliers must be able to include these in the product data
exchange. Therefore, we designed local standard features, identified with special codes like
EFUK0001, that link the feature to the country (in this case UK) that issued the standard. All local
features will be translated in all available languages, but can be easily filtered out by each user (on the
specific codes) if not relevant for the user.
3.5. Values
To each alphanumeric feature of an ETIM class, a fixed list of possible values is assigned; the order of
this value list of a feature within an ETIM class is sorted language-dependent; so, the value list of the
feature “EF000007 – Colour” can be different in each ETIM class that uses this feature.
3.6. Units
Numerical and range features always need a unit of measurement which defines what value is
expected. An exception are features like “number of...”. These numerical features do not need a unit.
Since ETIM is now no longer just used in Europe but globally, we had a difficult challenge regarding
units in the classification model. Where we use metric units in Europe, in North America they use
imperial units. What makes it even more complicated is that often the unit is the same (like Watt, Volt,
Lumen, …) and in other cases different (like millimetre versus inch). To tackle this problem, we
introduced a second unit field in our database for imperial units, which is only filled when the feature
has a different unit for the metrical and imperial system. See screenshot below for an example in
CMT. For more information on how we made this work in the data exchange without changing the
exchange format, see chapter 4.4. on metric versus imperial release.
3.7. Synonyms
Also often referred to as “keyword”, it means an alternative name for a product class (not for a product
group) and a reference to several product classes is possible, a product class can have several
synonyms, synonyms are not related to each other. A synonym does not have an ID, it is directly
assigned to an ETIM class (language-dependent). The local ETIM organization is responsible for the
synonyms in the local language.
The content of the ETIM model is identical in all member countries, which means that any ETIM class
in use in a country has exactly the same features with the same identifying code for all the countries.
However, in the past the release format was slightly different per country. Because this could and did
indeed cause some confusion, ETIM decided to develop a new uniform international release format
based on XML, a modern and flexible carrier for the ETIM model. Every country can still decide to
have additional country-specific release formats, as described in chapter 4.2, but starting from ETIM
6.0 ETIM IXF is considered THE international standard ETIM release format. The ETIM IXF format is
multilingual, so it can contain multiple language versions of the ETIM model in one file.
Below the summarized XSD diagram is displayed to give an overview of the sections in the format,
after that we will focus on the respective sections in more detail. However, for the complete and
detailed format description we refer to the separate document on ETIM IXF.
The format is built up with a header section, master tables with all the used groups, features, values,
units and the class section defining classes and relating them to groups, features, values and units.
The master table for units contains all the units used in this release or export, with its official code (ID)
and the respective translations of description and abbreviation, as illustrated in the example below.
The master table for values contains all the values used in this release or export, with its official code
(ID) and the respective translations of the description, as illustrated in the example below.
The master table for groups contains all the groups used in this release or export, with its official code
(ID) and the respective translations of the description, as illustrated in the example below.
What the above diagram does not indicate is that the ETIM IXF format also contains change codes on
CLASS level, on CLASSFEATURE level and on CLASSFEATUREVALUE level. These change codes
indicate if an element is new, changed, unchanged or deleted.
The ETIM IXF format as described in chapter 4.1 is the international master or source format for all the
member countries. However, local ETIM organizations are free to choose other additional formats in
which they want to make the ETIM model available to their local members. This is often done to serve
specific needs of users or more general software applications.
ETIM International has neither direct involvement nor responsibility in the definition and distribution of
country specific formats, other than to facilitate these in the CMT database. The ETIM CMT master
database already supports exports formats like CSV and EXCEL. Please contact your local staff office
for more information on country specific formats.
In addition to our downloadable file containing the complete ETIM model structure, ETIM also offers
webservices for direct access to the model via the ETIM API (Application Programming Interface). The
ETIM API is continuously updated and started with a few base services, but now offers full access to
the model.
The ETIM API services are developed in Swagger, an open-source software framework that helps
developers to design, build and document REST webservices. Visit the ETIM API dedicated webpage
to test the services and find the documentation you need.
The time period between official international ETIM releases is momentarily around three years. This
time period is determined by factors like adaptation time, version stability and time for development
cycle. It is clear that a standard needs version stability, which can be considered an advantage of a
standard and cannot be expected to be able to adapt to market- or product changes real time. This will
not change for the official release, the version that everyone is expected to support.
On the other hand however, the market is asking ETIM more and more to provide a more flexible
solution, a solution that makes it possible to anticipate the next publication. This means using new
classes, features or values already for internal applications. This means being able to communicate
this information bilaterally between two trading partners, if both support this information. This means
having an option of spreading the internal workload involved in adapting the classified product
information to a new ETIM release.
For those countries interested in offering a more dynamic solution to release changes to their
members ETIM International will support so called “dynamic releases”. This dynamic release contains
all classes that are “Published” or “Ready to publish” at the moment of export. Each country can
decide if it wants to offer a dynamic release or not, and if so, if they want to have a continuous
dynamic release (daily or weekly) or not (ETIM 8.1 etcetera). See example scheme below.
Today
Clearly there are restrictions to a dynamic release. Everyone is expected to support an official ETIM
version; dynamic releases are always optional for those who wish to use them and are either for
internal use or bilateral exchange only. Moreover, class changes that are “ready to publish” can still be
revoked depending on the arguments; of course, this should be exception rather than the rule.
We strongly advice that software tools using the dynamic release visualize the upcoming changes,
additions and deletions, so that the manufacturer and also the user of the data can see and decide
which features and values to fill and/or use.
A dynamic release is identified in the ETIM IXF format by the header element “Prerelease” and always
gives the changes related to the current official ETIM release using the change codes as explained in
chapter 4.1. For more technical details we refer to the format description document on the ETIM IXF
format and the dedicated document on ETIM Dynamic release, which you can find in the download
section on our website (under classification and format).
Only in CMT (see screenshot in chapter 3) you will see both units next to each other, length is still
length, whether it is expressed in meters or feet. But if we make an export (release) from CMT you can
choose to have metric units, imperial units or both.
At the export for the features with imperial units a different code is assigned to distinguish it from the
metrical variant. So, for example you can have an EF007220 for Busbar thickness in mm and an
EFI07220 for Busbar thickness in inch.
So, the separate EFI code (still related to the original metric one) makes it unambiguous again. And as
you can see for the example below, it is now possible to unambiguously exchange both the values for
the metric and imperial unit at the same time.
The notation for ETIM releases has been quite diverse in the past. It is important that we use a
consistent notation in all formats and documentation. ETIM decided for an official notation as “ETIM-
8.0” for official releases and “DYNAMIC” for dynamic releases. Any ETIM documentation that is not
yet compliant with this notation will be changed at first occasion (release or revision).
The ETIM data model is completely uniform, differing only in the language.
The exchange format for classified product data, not to be confused with the release format for the
data model, however is set and defined by each local ETIM organization individually. ETIM
International recommends the BMEcat® standard, which is the most common exchange format within
the ETIM countries.
The BMEcat®-Standard was introduced in November 1999 in cooperation with the BME e.V. (German
Federal Association for Materials-Management, Procurement and Logistics) as a standard for
electronic data-transfer of multimedia product-catalogues. It is based on the internet-standard XML
(Extensible Markup Language) as a universal platform and manufacturer-independent exchange-
format. Catalogues created in this generally accepted format prevent special individual solutions for
different customers.
The BMEcat®-standard today counts as one of the most strongly accepted formats for e-business.
Numerous well-known companies e.g. American Express, AUDI, Bayer, BMW, Deutsche Bahn,
Philips, Siemens, VISA and many others take part in the BMEcat® initiative.
ETIM International has released guidelines on how to use the BMEcat® Version 2005 standard for the
exchange of ETIM classified product data, including country specific regulations. See the dedicated
ETIM BMEcat guideline document, which you can find in the download section on our website. ETIM
also offers its members the use of the ETIM BMEcat certification tool to validate and certify their ETIM
BMEcat files to the ETIM BMEcat guidelines and the ETIM classification releases. You can find this
tool following the links on the top of our homepage.
A support contact per country is appointed, who will organize and coordinate the (local) process of
generating change requests to the current ETIM version. Whether this is done by appointing working
groups or otherwise will be left to the country’s own judgement. The support contact will be
responsible for entering change requests in the ETIM CMT portal, after which they can be processed
and decided on. This chapter describes the possible processes, the workflow and the decision
making.
When new classes are proposed first a check will be done to ensure that the products are not already
covered by existing classes or should be seen as an extension by changing existing classes. The
country staff office will perform this first check which will be verified by the SC. If the request for a new
class will be estimated as an extension to an existing class, the necessary changes to the existing
class will be proposed and are further to be processed as such. When it is clear that the respective
products have no interference or overlap with existing classes the request will be developed as a new
ETIM class. See further chapter 6.4 for general provisions to RCFs.
The SC and/or the staff offices can initiate general improvements to the ETIM model to improve the
model quality, which can have impact on individual classes. Usually, these improvements are related
to consistency or duplicates in entities. However, the SC can decide to dose the execution of this type
of changes in time to keep the impact of changes within reasonable limits. General improvements are
usually a result of the application of guidelines that are determined. For guidelines see chapter 7.
Examples:
• Consistency in the use of abbreviations. In most language versions words like “maximum” are
abbreviated as “Max.”
• Consistency in the use of punctuation marks like “x/y” instead of “x / y”
• Duplicates like “Type of lamp” versus “Lamp type”
Note: In CMT we can give double features or values the status ‘deprecated’. This means that they still
exist in the ETIM tables since they are used in actual class versions, but can no longer be found or
selected when entering new classification. The status of ‘deprecated’ elements is made clear by
displaying them in a lighter shade of grey as the example below, making them easy to recognize. If
then a class containing ‘deprecated’ elements is under construction (for other reasons), the
opportunity is used to change the ‘deprecated’ element to its successor. This way the change is the
least disturbing for suppliers using the specific class. When there are no more class versions using the
deprecated element, it will no longer appear in the ETIM release (but still exists in the ETIM master
database while used in previous versions!).
Regardless of the nature of the development (new class, change to existing class, general
improvement) the procedure to hand in, process and decide an RFC is the same. This chapter gives
some general provisions on RFCs and describes the workflow and decision making.
First some general provisions to which an RFC has to comply with to be accepted as a valid RFC:
• The communication language for RFCs and discussion is English. All proposals (content) are
to be entered in the countries own language(s) as well as in the system language ‘ETIM
English’ (British English)
• To make clear to other stakeholders which products are dealt with the addition of reference
products (pictures, preferably also manufacturer product numbers) is mandatory
• The general description of the RFC gives a clear summary of the nature of the changes
proposed, like “Add synonym ES” or “Delete feature because of changed regulations”
• The general description of the RFC gives a clear indication of who requested the RFC
The workflow, as incorporated in the CMT tool, knows four phases in the RFC process, these are
clearly indicated at the status page of an RFC, see example below of all the subsequent phases:
Phase 1 – Proposal
In this phase the requester can prepare his RFC by entering the requested changes directly in the
CMT system. In this phase the RFC is not yet visible in lists with RFC overviews and will not yet be
As soon as the requester has sent in his request the workflow initiates a notification to the ETIM
administrator groups (always SC members) that a proposal for a change request has been handed in
through CMT. The RFC is assigned to the person that should consider it and respond to the requester
within 7 days if his request is accepted (set open for discussion), set back to proposal (additional
information requested) or rolled back (dismissed). In this phase a brief check is done if the RFC
complies with ETIM rules and regulations. In case the RFC is dismissed of course a clear
argumentation is given, like the person is not entitled to propose RFCs, the proposed class already
exists, etc. When the RFC is regarded as a valid RFC and it is accepted by the administrator, it is
assigned to and automatically set to the next phase in the workflow. Admittance of an RFC in this
phase can be done by all individual administrators and does not require approval of the full SC.
Phase 3 – Discussion
In this phase the RFC is set open for discussion for a period of 60 days, all allowed stakeholders
(ETIM members) can participate in the discussion using the discussion board to an RFC. For minor
changes (only additions, this to the judgement of the SC), the SC can decide to skip the discussion
phase, to make it possible to enable a quick implementation. At the start of this phase a notification is
sent (by weekly summary at this time) to everyone that has indicated he wants to be informed to
changes in this class or group of classes. Notification is organized by the user’s favourites selection,
as described in chapter 2.2. All discussion entries are also included in the weekly status update on
changes.
After 60 days the discussion term will be automatically closed by the workflow engine and a
notification is sent to the administrator group.
Depending on the status of the discussion the administrator could decide to extend the discussion
term with another 60 days. If the discussion is not extended, the administrator will estimate if the RFC
is ready to be scheduled for decision making by the SC. There a basically three scenarios in this:
• If there is no discussion or the discussion has led to an agreement on the RFC, the RFC will
be scheduled for approval by the SC.
• If the discussion has not led to an agreement on the RFC but to the opinion of the SC a
workable compromise is feasible, a proposal for a final RFC proposal is done by the SC by e-
mail to the involved parties. After receiving the response to the proposal, the RFC will be
scheduled for final decision making.
• If the discussion on the RFC is substantial and if in the opinion of the SC an easy agreement
on the RFC is not expected the SC can organize a (physical or teleconference) meeting
intended to find a comprise solution. If no compromise can be reached the SC will take a
decision on the RFC considering all interests as good as possible. If necessary, the SC will
ask for an investigation to be performed by neutral experts.
The decision of the SC will be notified to the requester. If the RFC is dismissed a proper
argumentation will be given why the RFC is dismissed. If the RFC is approved, the class version
status will be automatically set to “ready for publication”, the class version is available in dynamic
releases and will officially be published at the next official release.
The decision of the SC is open for appeal to any ETIM member that has objections to the decision;
such has to be done within 30 days after the SC decision by e-mail to [email protected]
with reference to the RFC-id and with a clear argumentation of the objection. The SC will answer to
the appealer if his objection is admissible and if so, the objection will be scheduled for examination in
the next SC meeting. The SC will communicate its reasoned decision on the objection to the appealer.
The procedure to enter class translations (new or changes) or add synonyms does not follow the
standard RFC procedure. To avoid many separate RFCs for each translation update, class
translations and synonyms can be added and edited continuously until the class is published.
• The class translation of a published class in ETIM is part of an ETIM release and cannot be
changed online in CMT.
o So, if you want to add or change class translations for published classes (like update
for ETIM 8.0) you will always have to send an Excel to the international staff office
with as column names ARTCLASSID, ARTCLASSVERSION, LANGUAGECODE and
ARTCLASSDESC. We will then upload it in the database, please note that the
ARTCLASSVERSION column is very important to connect the translation to the right
class version!
• If the class translation is for the next release (or dynamic release) then you can enter it in CMT
if your login allows you to do so.
• Class Translations are no longer part of an RFC and no longer in the RFC tab pages.
• Before you can add or change class translations or synonyms there has to be a new version
of the class first. So, if there was no other (approved) RFC yet to the class you still have to
open one to create a new working version.
• All this might seem unnecessary complicated, but the RFC processes in the CMT database
are not that easy, so there is no easier solution.
• There are 3 scenarios as described below:
• Open a new RFC and use as RFC title “Open new version for class name change” or “Open
new version for synonyms” and set RFC type to “Change class name” or “Add/delete
synonyms”.
• Now a new version of the class is created, and anyone (with sufficient rights) can change
class translations till the class will be published again. Just send the RFC in, the staff office
will approve it or close it if it is no longer needed.
• Now leave the RFC by clicking on the highest version number and then click on the
Translations page. You can now change translations by just clicking on the class translation
you want to change. Change the translation and click OK.
• The info fields for a new class have been split up in 2 parts: Class Info and RFC Info. In the
Class info part, it is now mandatory to start with the English class name (system language)!
Please make sure this translation is as accurate as possible since it is the key to others for
translation! In the next step RFC info for the usual information on an RFC.
• As before, by clicking on the class version (always 1 for a new class) you can add the
translation and synonyms for your own language version.
An (official) ETIM publication consists of the collection of unique classes (no multiple versions of one
class) fixed at a certain moment in time. A publication has a name and a date. Depending on the
format the publication contains change codes reflecting the changes compared to the previous official
ETIM publication. A publication contains only classes with status "Published" except when it is a
dynamic release.
Release planning will be proposed by the ETIM International SC and communicated to the involved
countries in time. Prior to an official release the Standardization Committee will provide a beta version
which can be examined and released via internet to all involved persons.
7. Guidelines classification
ETIM groups serve as a structural support for the expert groups and the Standardization Committee
and to simplify the navigation through the classification. They can be used as a catalogue structure,
but this is not the primary function.
A group must contain at least two product classes.
Product classes describe similar products. They summarize products, which can be characterized by
similar features. A product class is defined by technical features and each product must be assigned
to exactly one product class.
If products cannot be classified, appropriate product classes must be created. It should be ensured
that there is no overlap with existing classes.
The change of a class name is only permitted if this has no effect on the products assigned to that
class. If there would be a change of the meaning, the old class has to be deleted and a new class has
to be created.
• Class names must be unique. To avoid naming conflicts, the descriptions should be as precise
as possible. Non-specific descriptions such as “cover” should be avoided because they can
occur in many areas of ETIM.
• Class names must be selected manufacturer-neutral. The descriptions are intended for
professionals in the relevant field and characterise the professional class.
• The singular form has to be chosen.
• The data model must be structured in such a way, that every product must be assigned to
exactly one class. The ETIM classification data model does not allow classifying a product
(with an identical product number) to multiple ETIM classes.
If a class should be deleted, it must be remarked where the products of the deleted class should go:
• generalisation:
there will be one or more classes (new or already existing), that are more general (e.g. delete
the classes “Lawn scarifier” and “Lawn aerator” and create a new class “Lawn
scarifier/aerator”
• specification:
there will be one or more classes (new or already existing), that are more specific (e.g. delete
the class “Hammer” and create new classes “Claw hammer”, “Smith hammer”, “Chisel
hammer”
• exception:
a class could be deleted without successor if the products, described by the class, do not exist
anymore at all
When considering merging or splitting classes, the decision on which classes to delete or not can be
affected by the impact on already classified data, thereby possibly overruling more general guidelines.
This to the discretion of the SC. Example: if class X (10.000 actual classified products) and class Y
(250 actual classified products) are merged to a more general class, the guidelines dictate a new class
Z. Due to the big difference in classified products, merging Y into X might be preferred to creating a
new class, in which case all 10.250 products need to be reclassified instead of just the 250 in Y.
Accessory and spare part classes can be of use to be able to classify products that can be seen as an
accessory to or a spare part for a main product (that normally exists as a separate class in ETIM). For
these products mostly a deep specification is not necessary, because they only fit as accessory or
spare part to a certain make (brand) or model. To make the solution for accessory and spare part
classes in ETIM as consistent as possible some general rules for these classes were agreed on:
• We will as much as possible combine accessories and spare parts in one combined class.
• The class name is generally composed as "Accessories/spare parts for...."
• Preferably the name of the accessories/spare parts class refers to the main product class it
relates to (if any), e.g. "Accessories/spare parts for ballast" when the name of the main
product class is "Ballast". Also, it can refer to a clearly delineated group of related classes,
e.g. EC011728 - Accessories/spare parts for central gas heaters.
• To avoid an explosion of classes, preferably consider accessory/spare part classes for groups
of products if possible, instead of for each separate product class.
• The first feature always should be EF000215 "Type of accessory/spare part"
• All the values listed in "Type of accessory/spare part" should also be entered as synonym (in
all languages). Excluded are of course values like e.g. “others” – they shall not be entered as
synonym.
Often a combination of several single products is sold together as a set with a unique product number
and a fixed price. In that case the set needs to be classified as such, the existing classes for the single
products in the set cannot be used, since a product can only be assigned to one single class.
There is an increasing interest for classification of services, like cable installation per meter. The ETIM
SC has decided that classification of services is allowed if closely related to core ETIM products.
Condition is that they are offered with a unique product number and for a fixed price. Example of an
existing class is EC002744 - Calibration measuring instrument. The SC does not by definition rejects
such requests, but much depends on the actual request, so admissibility will be decided on a case-by-
case basis.
The features should enable the user of product data a useful pre-selection within a large range of
products. They are not intended to describe a product in such detail that it finally enables to select
between the last two remaining products in a selection. At this point the manufacturers own free
description (in the product data exchange file) should clarify the difference in addition to the general
and standardized ETIM features.
Another function of a feature list is to describe the class and to differentiate it from another class.
• The number of features of a class should be limited to the most important technical
characteristics for selecting the right product.
• At a definition of features for a class, the features are taken from a “feature base table”. Only if
the desired feature does not exist or cannot be replaced by similar one, the requester can
define a new feature.
• A feature description must be unique. It should only occur once (with the same feature type A,
N, R or L) in the whole model.
• The use of numerical, logical or range features is preferred to the creation of alphanumerical
features.
• Numerical and range features usually need a unit of measurement. The assigned unit should
be based on normed standards such as the ISO standard. Exceptions are features with the
expression “Number of...” These numerical features do not need a unit. Where relevant an
imperial unit has to be added as well next to the metric unit, see chapter 3 section units for
more information.
• Alphanumerical features are always closed. I.e. for every alphanumerical feature, a value list
must be defined, which contains all possible values. The list must be defined during the
creation of a feature and it should contain at least three values, arguable exceptions aside.
The exception of two values is possible, but not in combination with one real value and the
value “others”.
• The deletion of features from a class is generally permitted but should only be used in
exceptional cases.
Each feature list within a class is sorted according to their importance and is also structured
meaningfully (dimensions, features of electrical data …).
This order is part of the data model and is the same for all language versions. It can be used for
example to show the order of features within an online search engine.
• A feature description must be unique within the data model in combination with its data type.
• The feature description should be clear and unambiguous, thus allowing as little chance as
possible for different interpretations. Where possible and applicable, features should have a
reference to international standards.
• Feature names should be short and to the point. When needed, an explanation to the feature
can be added to the remark/definition field.
• The renaming of features (except for the spelling correction without changing the meaning)
and the changing of units should be avoided. If renaming should imply a change in meaning or
in case of a unit change the existing feature has to be deleted and a new feature is created
with a new ID.
• Features that describe limits (minimum/maximum) always have the addition “Min.” or “Max.” at
the beginning of their descriptions.
For example: maximum power output = <Max. power output>
This rule may be waived on the basis of linguistic characteristics but within a language
version conformity is needed.
• Features that describe a value according to a defined standard should in ETIM English be
described as “… according to …” like “Efficiency according to EN 779”. Also in other
languages the preferred solution should be used consistently.
There are four different types of features within the ETIM classification model:
Alphanumeric
Alphanumeric features can be a combination of letters and numbers. They are always univalent, that
means, only one value can be chosen, never 2 or more. This must be respected when creating a
value list within a feature of a class.
The values are not only assigned to a feature but additional to a class. So, each value list is different
depending on the class.
If a value list within a feature of a class is not complete, the value “others” can be added.
Numeric
To a numeric feature one real number can be assigned.
Logical
Within the ETIM data model, a logical feature is designed to give the answer yes/true or no/false
(Boolean). But these values are not part of the data model but part of the exchange format.
Range
This feature type allows the definition of a value range of real numbers through a minimum and
maximum value (value pair). Whether the data type is Range is not always obvious in the description
of the feature. As mentioned before, the ETIM range feature is considered to be a closed range, so an
interval which includes all its limit points, mathematically denoted as [a..b].
The feature type is chosen when creating a new feature (ID) and can NOT be changed. If the same
feature is needed with a different type, then a new feature needs to be created.
The following rules have been established within the ETIM data model:
Local standard features can only be created by the country in question itself. So, if you need a new
local feature for another country, you have to contact the local ETIM office. This is important to keep
high quality in ETIM because the local ETIM organisations should know best what features are correct
and where they are needed.
Finally, each local standard feature should be come with a remark that is built up as following:
• The URL for the organisation (when existing and necessary/helpful), followed by a hyphen
• The meaning of the abbreviation (if any) in local language
• Example see below
The material a product is made of can be defined by the following two features:
• Material
• Material quality
The feature “Material quality” can optionally be used to specify the material in more detail.
Example: Material = Steel and Material quality = St 37.2 (1.0037)
Users that don’t know the detailed specification can just filter on steel and anyone looking for a very
specific steel quality can also easily make the right selection.
The value for “Stainless steel” is an unavoidable duplicate in the ETIM English version due to
translation issues. Please use EV000166 “Stainless steel” for the material and EV000294 “Stainless
steel” for the colour.
To specify the material surface, one or both of the following 2 features can be used, where it is
important to know the difference:
• Surface protection:
used when a protective layer is added OVER the surface, with values like coated, painted,
galvanized, etc.
• Surface treatment:
any treatment that is done TO the surface itself, with values like brushed, sanded, polished,
etc.
• Only “basic colours” are allowed in ETIM. Also, wood colours (like “Oak”) and material colours
(like “Copper”) are permitted to be used in ETIM.
• As basic colours are allowed:
• Finally, the following special values can be relevant for colour features:
• As only exception ‘light’ and ‘dark’ will be admitted, like in ‘light grey’ and ‘dark grey’, but only if
this is commonly used in the market to indicate and identify a technical specification.
In some cases we want to specify in ETIM the exact text that is printed on the product. Solution so far
was to give a value list with the text value in capital letters for each language, like “DOWN”. But this
was not sustainable with so many languages.
When the imprint is in more than one language, the value ‘several’ is chosen. The value list for the
language feature EF015922 shall consist of all current ETIM languages.
The value list of a feature can be different in each ETIM class that uses this feature. Please only add
values to a value list that are relevant for the actual products in the class. Do NOT add general value
lists for features like material etc. You can use them as a basis to select from, but do not add values to
the list that do not demonstrably exist for the product.
Value lists should be unambiguous and of the ‘same level’. For example, values “Plastic” and
“Polyethylene (PE)” should not be in the same value list, since PE is also Plastic.
Each value is defined as a translatable or non-translatable value. Most values are translatable, that
means the description can be different in the varying language versions. Non-translatable values have
exactly the same description, indifferent in which language version because they are language-
independent:
If the spelling of the capital letter of the first word of a value is not consistent in all actual ETIM
languages this value is automatically to be treated as translatable (language-dependent).
The order of a value list of a feature within an ETIM class is a mixture of language-independent
assorting (values like “None”, “Others”, “Not applicable”) and language-dependent values (most
values). Language-dependent values will be standard sorted alphabetically on ETIM English.
The following rules have been established within the ETIM data model:
• For values which represent a dimension in inch, in ETIM English the unit should be figured
with the word “inch”, not with the symbol “. Each country can decide themselves whether to
use the word “inch” (translated in the respective version language), or the symbol “, as long as
it is used consistently in the language version.
• The use of the value “not applicable” is not allowed in ETIM. For most classes there will be
features that will not be applicable for all products in that class. That feature can just as well
be numeric, range or logical features, where no value “not applicable” is possible. In the data
exchange features that are not relevant for the product should be left blank. Or in the case of
exchange via BMEcat, the minus sign “-“ must be delivered. Optionally you can then specify in
the FVALUE_DETAILS field the code “NA” for ‘not applicable’.
• The value “None” should only be used if it serves a clear selection purpose, not as an
alternative for “not applicable”. So, if users could be looking specifically for a product that does
NOT have a certain feature or function, then the use of “None” is allowed.
• If a unit should be assigned to a numeric or a range feature, it must be taken from the ETIM
“unit base tables”.
• Units should be used consistently in related classes.
• Unit translations are a local responsibility, but a uniform notation is considered important.
Where possible we should refer to (base or derived) SI units, at least for the abbreviations
(short descriptions).
• For features related to hydraulics (water/fluids) ‘bar’ (EU570056) is the preferred unit.
Please notice that RFC reference products are only temporary and will be deleted when the RFC is
closed. So, for new classes you need to put the reference products on class level, not (only) on RFC
level. Also, if you want reference products for changes to stay visible after RFC approval, you will
need to upload them two times, on RFC and on class level.
Some guidelines:
8. Glossary
In this chapter a brief summary overview is provided of additions and changes to the previous version
of this document.