Jon Bon, here's a pic of my shop roof... each panel is 34' long, and total width 64'. I ended up building a fixture for a bucket lift so we could bring them up a couple at a time without kinking. My GF (now wife) ran the lift from the ground, and me and 2 buddies did the install. The most critical thing was getting the first couple panels setup so that they'd run true and making sure you have adequate overhang at the rear from the start.
One of my favorite all-around tools is a Bosch pocket-sized battery impact. One man would gently walk on the snap portion of the seam to snap the panel down, then it was a matter of a minute or two to run in all the screws. With the impact, you can gauge just the right amount of torque in seconds without deformation. Works better than a slip-clutch on a drill. Slots are already stamped for the screw to allow movement for expansion/contraction. Rinse and repeat, checking for square every few panels.
I've since done a couple smaller projects with the same roofing, even using it as vertical siding on DW's modern-style she-shed this year. Easy enough to cut, though I use a short-nose snip to cut the two high ridges, then long-nose to go across the panel.
Cost is around $2/lin ft from the local box store (cheaper on sale) and you can specify length to the inch. 20+ colors. The hidden fee is packaging, roughly $100 to build up a custom crate, wrap it in vinyl so it's water tight and ship it to the store. Then I usually spring to have it delivered due to the length.