Libraries have a rich tradition of solid customer service. Good service today, however, is often not good enough. Libraries can improve the customer experience by understanding what it means to truly deliver outstanding value. Implementing customer-centric marketing and the latest technology can increase the perceived value of library usage before, during, and after service delivery. The evolving library experience framework explains how library administrators can prepare for current challenges and future changes to enhance customer service. A customer value-based services perspective will help libraries strengthen overall user experiences to keep a larger "share of customer" from formidable information rivals such as search engines, online databases, news sources, video sharing sites, internet service providers, and content creators. Creative climate and market orientation are key factors leading to better performance in organizations (Im & Workman, 2004;Jaworski & Kohli, 1993;Narver & Slater, 1990). An important aspect of marketingoriented practices in libraries today is the development of internal marketing to communicate mission and organizational values to employees (internal customers); this buy-in process is a vital part of the new customer-focused paradigm. Although research shows that librarians are gaining a more positive attitude towards the development of a marketing culture and the utilization of marketing activities, it varies by setting (public librarians are more promarketing than academic librarians), position (more enthusiasm by administrators than reference and technical services librarians), years of experience (more favorable), and exposure to marketing training (Parker, Kaufman-Scarborough, & Parker, 2007). This paper argues that libraries must adapt to change via implementing a customer value strategy. As a consumer-focused service provider, libraries must go beyond customer service to deliver enhanced customer experiences and create superior customer value whether it is face-to-face, online, or via a hybrid model. The keywords are disruption and differentiation. Perhaps you remember Blockbuster Video, Borders bookstore, and Tower Records? These market leaders failed to adapt to the internet and changing marketplace and were supplanted by Netflix, Amazon, and Apple, respectively. Are brickand-mortar library systems doomed to suffer a similar fate? Will they be replaced by digital information alternatives?All libraries (public, private, educational, and corporate) must justify their value to society, communities, and their patrons. The general assumption is that more use of materials (print, digital, other) is of greater value than less use. An opportunity exists for libraries to assess the economic value of internet-based services and resources that assist in education, technological literacy, job-seeking, and social service applications (Jaeger, Bertot, Kodoma, & DeCoster, 2011). A recent three-day retreat of 60 academic library executives and managers brainstormed key trends impacting...