Hello, I think it's a great system if you have little time for purchasing and a budget that can support your patrons' reading habits. Bangor Public Library participated in PPU for about six months, but ultimately decided that it wasn't a good fit for us. We were hitting our spending cap early in the month and if I didn't turn off the PPU, patrons could continue to place holds on items that wouldn't be available until the beginning of the next month. When the first of the month came, the holds from the previous month would eat up the budget in the first day in the new month. There was also a UX issue where the "available now" filter would show the 3k PPU titles in the available list, but they couldn't actually be borrowed because of the spending cap. Also, turning off the PPU aggravated patrons because the holds they placed "disappeared" until I turned it back on. Ultimately, we were fielding patron questions, concerns, and frustration on a daily basis and decided that the staff time would be better spent purchasing titles with the PPU budget. That's not to say that this won't be a great fit for your library, but this particular lending model wasn't right for BPL. The Bibliotheca support team were responsive to our requests and suggestions and I'm glad that we piloted the PPU here, it just wasn't a "set it and forget it" solution. Please reach out directly if you have additional questions. Cheers, Meg On Wed, May 12, 2021 at 5:45 PM Karen Eger <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Hello, > > We are looking to add this service. Does anyone have any experience to > share about how it has worked in their libraries? > > Karen McCarthy Eger > Library Director > she/her/hers > > South Berwick Public Library > > > 27 Young Street > South Berwick, ME 03908 > > 207-384-3308 > www.southberwicklibrary.org<http://www.southberwicklibrary.org> > -- Meg Gray, MLIS Head of Reference Services Bangor Public Library 145 Harlow Street Bangor, ME 04401 207-947-8336 x129 207-922-6066 (direct) pronouns: she/her/hers