If you run a small church, school or non-profit library on ResourceMate and the desktop is the thing wearing you down - the data stuck on one PC, no way to catalogue from home, the Windows-only install a new volunteer can't just open in a browser - a cloud tool is the switch worth looking at.
Your Book Nest runs entirely in the browser. There is nothing to install, the same library opens on a phone, tablet or laptop, and every volunteer signs in with their own login. It costs a flat $60 a year with everything included.
ResourceMate is a mature, capable system built for a desktop era. For a library of 20 to 50 patrons, the question is whether that desktop shape still fits.
What a year on ResourceMate actually costs
The "one-time licence" headline is the part that misleads. The licence is one-time, but almost everything a running library needs sits beside it as a recurring or add-on cost.
The licence ladder starts at $295 for Lite and $495 for Essential. Neither of those editions can print barcode labels - that starts at Essential Plus, $695. So the honest entry price for a library that wants to print its own labels is $695, not $295.
Annual support is separate and recurring, from $142 to $528 a year depending on edition. It is not truly optional either: let it lapse and ISBN lookup, program updates, off-site backup and the anniversary data check all fall away.
Then there is the Windows PC the desktop editions run on, sitting at the circulation desk holding the only copy of your data unless you pay to network or host it.
A realistic year one for a small library that wants to print labels is Essential Plus at $695 up front, plus $188 a year in support, plus the PC - then $188 every year after. The hosted "Online" edition avoids the install but is billed per user account: $295 per account per year plus a $75 set-up fee, so two people checking books in and out at once is $590 a year. All figures are in US dollars.
Your Book Nest is $60 a year, flat. Barcode labels, the copy-code generator, and a login for every volunteer are all included, and there is no PC to buy because it runs in the browser you already have.
If the wider question of why library tools cost what they do is on your mind, why library software is so expensive covers the pattern.
What matters for a 20-50-patron library
A library this size lives or dies on a few everyday things, not on the length of the feature list.
Getting started. ResourceMate offers a trial download but no live demo you can poke at first. Your Book Nest's home page is a working demo library - add a book, lend it, take it back, with no account and no card. You see the whole thing before you commit.
Multiple copies. ResourceMate does model copies properly, which many cheaper tools don't - but copy management is gated to its Extended and Premium editions (and the Plus editions). Your Book Nest keeps normalised copies in the core: add a title once, give it as many copies as you own, and each copy carries its own status and history. The full model is in how to track multiple copies of the same book.
Barcodes and labels. ResourceMate's barcode-label printing is edition-gated, so a base licence can't print at all. Your Book Nest prints labels free on blank Avery stock, and every copy also gets a three-word code like oak-bat-tree printed on its label - read it off the cover and type it, with no scanner to buy. Whether a scanner is worth it at all is covered in do you need a barcode scanner for a small library.
Volunteers. ResourceMate licenses by simultaneous user - beyond three concurrent users you buy a Network licence plus extra user licences at $100 each, and the hosted edition charges per account. Your Book Nest gives every volunteer their own individual login at no per-seat charge, however many of them there are.
Item limits. ResourceMate's Lite edition hard-caps at 2,500 items and cannot be increased. Your Book Nest's paid plan holds up to 5,000. Neither ceiling is anywhere near a 20-to-50-patron shelf, so this only matters if you plan to grow a lot.
Where ResourceMate still wins
ResourceMate does several real things Your Book Nest deliberately does not, and if you need any of them, it is the better tool for you.
- MARC and Z39.50 import - pulling full catalogue records from the Library of Congress and other systems. Your Book Nest is built for cataloguing without MARC, covered in how to catalogue a small library without MARC, so if MARC is a requirement, stay with ResourceMate.
- A public web catalogue (OPAC) where anyone can search your collection online. Your Book Nest has no public catalogue by design.
- Holds and a reserve shelf for queueing a checked-out item. Your Book Nest does not have holds yet.
- Fines and fee collection for overdue and lost items. Your Book Nest does not charge fines.
- A circulation rules engine with enforced checkout limits and restrictions.
- Deep customisable and financial reports and dashboards, including school-specific features like Accelerated Reader.
- Offline desktop operation and genuine one-time ownership. If you want software you buy once and run on a PC with no internet and no recurring subscription, that is exactly what ResourceMate is, and no cloud tool matches it.
A library that wants a public catalogue, MARC records, holds, fines or offline ownership should keep ResourceMate. The case for switching is simplicity, cloud access, and a flat price - not a longer feature list.
How Your Book Nest helps
Your Book Nest does the core job of a small library - catalogue, copies, lending, returns, patrons, overdues - and does it in a browser, on any device, for a flat $60 a year with every feature included.
Moving over is a catalogue export from ResourceMate and an import into Your Book Nest. Existing barcodes come across into a free-text field, so the stickers already on your books keep working. From the first day each physical book is its own copy under one title, every volunteer has their own login, and there is no PC tied to the desk.
The home page is a live demo - add a book, give it two copies, and lend them to two people, with no account and no install. If you are weighing a couple of cloud options, the Librarika comparison and best church library software cover the wider field.
Your Book Nest



