Mon. May 11, 2026
It’s one of the most visible measures of patron satisfaction in a public library: the holds list. When a highly anticipated adult title is released and dozens – sometimes hundreds – of patrons are waiting for a handful of copies, that queue is a signal. It tells you demand is high, your community is engaged, and your collection may not be keeping up.
Long hold queues for new adult releases are not just a patron experience issue. They’re a collection development challenge, a staffing challenge, and increasingly, a vendor challenge. Here’s how libraries are approaching it.
Why Hold Queues Get So LongHold queues for popular adult releases build for weeks before a book even ships. Patrons hear about a title through social media, book clubs, reviews, or word of mouth, and they add themselves to the holds list long before the release date. By the time the books arrive at the library, the queue is already deep.
The problem is compounded when:
Books arrive after the street date because the vendor couldn’t guarantee pre-release deliveryBooks arrive unprocessed and require staff time before they can be checked outThe library ordered too few copies because demand was hard to predictMultiple titles from different publishers arrive in separate shipments at different timesEvery day a high-demand title sits unprocessed is a day a patron is waiting.
Strategies Libraries Are Using to Reduce HoldsAdult librarians and collection development teams are tackling this problem from a few angles:
Order more copies earlier. Increasing copy counts for anticipated titles before the release date reduces holds per copy. But this only works if you can actually get the books before or on release day.Use preorder programs with guaranteed delivery. Placing preorders with a vendor who commits to pre-street-date fulfillment means books arrive ready to circulate on release day, not a week or two later.Prioritize shelf-ready processing. When books arrive cataloged and labeled, staff can move them directly to the shelf without a processing backlog. This can meaningfully reduce the gap between arrival and availability.Centralize title tracking. Instead of monitoring release dates across multiple publishers and retailer channels, working with a single vendor who surfaces curated weekly lists of high-demand titles simplifies planning and ensures you are not missing anticipated releases.How a Street Date Program Fits InA street date program for public libraries is one of the most direct tools for reducing holds on new adult releases. When you can preorder select titles well in advance and receive them shelf-ready before the publisher’s street date, you remove two of the biggest contributors to long queues: late delivery and slow processing.
The result is that patrons who’ve been waiting since before publication can check out a title on the day it releases – which is exactly the expectation they came in with.
The Follett Street Date Program Addresses This DirectlyEach week, Follett Content features up to 20 highly anticipated new adult titles available for preorder in Titlewave®. When libraries place an order at least 60 days before the publisher’s street date, Follett Content commits to delivering those books shelf-ready – fully cataloged and processed – before release. Patron demand on release day doesn’t have to mean a backlog. It can mean a shelf that’s ready.
Start reducing holds with pre-street-date preorders.Visit the Follett Street Date Program page to see this week’s featured adult titles and place your order in Titlewave.
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Check out other blogs in this series:
What's a street date program for public libraries, and why does it matter?Follett Content is now serving public libraries – here's what you need to know.The Adult Title Fulfillment Gap in Public Libraries – and What It Means for Collection Development
For the complete article (non-reader view with multimedia and original links),
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Head to FollettContent.com