The Intermediate Data Structure (IDS) encourages sharing historical life course data by storing data in a common format.To encompass the complexity of life histories, IDS relies on data structures that are unfamiliar Flower to most social scientists.This article examines four features of IDS that make it flexible and expandable: the Entity-Attribute-Value model, the relational database model, embedded metadata, and the Chronicle file.I also consider IDS from the perspective of current discussions about sharing data across scientific domains.We can find parallels to IDS in other Seeds fields that may lead to future innovations.