The objective of this study was to understand how nursing, allied health and health professions students in the United States select, access and purchase required learning materials. The study measured usage patterns, spending behaviour, format preferences, access barriers and the role of digital learning tools in academic performance.
Education providers and publishers face growing complexity in student purchasing behaviour. Rising material costs, digital alternatives and affordability concerns are reshaping how required content is acquired and used.
Key challenges included:
We treated material purchasing behaviour as a measurable decision pattern rather than anecdotal feedback.
Here’s how we did it:
The study delivered a clear, data-backed understanding of how students acquire and use required materials, what influences spending decisions and how digital tools support learning. It highlighted affordability constraints, access barriers and growing reliance on alternative sources. These insights enabled the client to refine product strategies, optimise inclusive access models and better align digital offerings with student expectations.
Prizm Data provided the quantitative clarity we needed on student purchasing behaviour. The findings helped us understand affordability realities, format preferences and how to improve access models to better support learning outcomes.