Meet Bradley Newberger: The Guy Who Turns Music into Money for Hotels

As a die-hard music aficionado, wannabe DJ, and devoted fan of chillout music, probably the hardest part opening my hotel will be creating the playlist.

That’s why when I heard about Ambiance Radio – a company co-founded by Bradley Newberger that turns background music into a science – I knew I had to learn more. His claim?

“It doesn’t matter whether you personally like the music or not”

“We’re building a 21-st century solution for background music. The fundamental way the industry thinks about music is wrong – it’s too often based on personal tastes. Personal tastes are so subjective. When you play to what the manager thinks guests should hear, the result is rarely what it could be.”

Bradley’s story begins when he was a senior student at Cornell University, working as a new manager for Taverna Banfi – the restaurant attached to the Statler Hotel (Cornell’s teaching laboratory for the hotel school). A few years ago, they completely renovated the restaurant to feel like a Tuscan-style bistro, and it looked fantastic. But the music was left untouched: a 5-disc CD changer played random tracks from Italian opera CDs. Consistently, the comment cards showed earned lower scores than any other element of the customer experience. So when Bradley became a manager, one of the first tasks was to fix the music.

He looked at the options that were available. Everyone’s first reaction is to program an iPod themselves, but this takes a really long time to do. Plus, it gets repetitive if this list never changes. A few high-end boutique firms specialize in creating playlists that reflect the personality of the hotel, but their approach is still based on personal tastes and preferences. They ask “What do you want the room to sound like or feel like,” and then a DJ will create a playlist based on these preferences.

This started Bradley on a quest to find more a more objective way to program music, which a couple of years later became Ambiance Radio.

Music can achieve business objectives

“In developing our company, we applied the findings of decades of academic and scientific research into how music affects the way people feel and behave.  Time after time, researchers found that music has a profound business effect on the environment. The right music could increase F&B revenues from 5 to 20%, depending on the time of day and music tested. In a lobby, music can make waiting in line feel shorter than it actual is – or reduce the time is seems it takes to retrieve your car at the valet. Music triggers a chemical reaction in the brain that changes perceptions.

Perhaps as importantly, music plays a big role in employee performance. The brain gets most engaged when it hears different types of music back to back. Productivity can be increased with the right mix.

The missing element until now: Technology

Technology is a key part of the Ambiance Radio platform. “We looked at what types of music achieved desired effects in the hospitality environment. We developed an algorithm that factors in who is in the room, what are the psychographics – and what the business objectives are there and created a series of proprietary processes that can deliver the Right Music for each venue, varying it day by day, hour by hour as needed. We capture data for each property in an interview and then the technology take over from there. Our system creates and delivers customized feeds for each site and updates them hourly.”

Surprising opportunity: Limited service hotels

I love talking about experience design and experience marketing on this blog, but sometimes get pushback from the owners of limited service hotels. “We can’t afford to spend money on things like that!” But as I wrote in Why Hotel Design Directly Affects The Prices You Can Charge, design and experience elements are what separates a $49 hotel room from an $800 room. Music is another key element in experience design.What’s interesting is that Bradley has seen a lot of initial traction with limited service hotels already.

“Music is something you can instantly put in and change the feel of the room. People walk in and when you see their expressions, you know they had a different experience.” Many limited service hotels play TVs in the lobby – but TVs are a poor way to introduce your guests to the hotel. “Guests come from all walks of life, and when you think about the political environment of today (for example), so-called centrist news organizations can lean one way or the other, and this can cause people to be emotionally involved. Changing the soundscape to music can affect a profound change on the environment.”

“There’s a profound difference between the music you play in the foreground in your home or office and the music that is best to play in the background of a hotel. In the foreground, you’re thinking about whether you like the song. But for background music, it’s not about what you personally like. It’s about what experience is best for the demographics and business objective you want to achieve in the space.”

“Music is for the guests in the room, and not your personal enjoyment.”

Thanks, Bradley! For more information, visit AmbianceRadio.com



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Article by Josiah Mackenzie // August 23, 2011 Josiah helps hospitality organizations use technology and the social web to provide better service and generate more profits.

Comments

 
  • Amazing ideas. I wonder why no one else had these ideas earlier. I think it is explainded very well and I myself would be willing to pay a higher price under these conditions.

  • Wow, this is extremely innovative! Love the idea as well; so sick of going into modern hotels listening to what we ca presumably call elevator music.

  • I think you hit the nail on the head when it comes to amenities as they relate to room value. In our “cut everything” economy mentality, it’s easy to forget that those extras will indeed mean the difference between a $50 per night room and an $800 one. My fear is that chain executives will keep cutting the little things until every franchise hotel is nothing more than a modified Super 8. And while I’m not knocking Super 8 (they have a great niche), what makes this industry great is the diversity. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for boutique hotels, but I’m also for all-around variety. Anyway, I’m rambling…

  • This is an amazing concept — off to read more about it. Thank you!

  • This sure is an amazing story. This is a great profile on Bradley.

  • God, I love this article. My first internship was at this 4* hotel that has the best location in Belgrade, Serbia, but sadly nothing else as a competitive advantage. After a few hours I realized they were playing one audio CD over and over and when I asked what’s the deal with that their response was that it was the only scratchless disc they had left. After three days I was starting to hate music I previously liked. I can only imagine how the guests felt, eating breakfast and lunch to the same tunes for days.

  • I just remembered my previous work. They keep on playing one cd the entire day. It was nice at first but later, it was booring and makes us feel sleepy. We don’t feel the good vibes. Indeed, the music being played in a room affects the people on it.

  • Music plays important role in hotel industry.Now a days every star hotels have own pub to entertain their guests.Bradley has done great work with his lots of efforts to make the music as the part of the hotel to entertain people.Thank you for sharing this amazing story of Bradley.

  • Interesting article. As a huge music fan I definitely agree that music has tremendous affects on how people feel. If the music is right, waiting 8 minutes to check-in may only feel like 2. But what I don’t understand is how the music is targeted. Sure employees may work harder if they enjoy the music, but who’s to say they actually enjoy it. There’s no one-music-fits-all, so how does their algorithm account for different people & their individual tastes?

  • Excellent idea and it is something that might actually just work with guests. But the thing with music is that its very important to get the right genre playing. Something that most people like or don’t mind listening to.

  • I always observe the music the plays in every hotel i visit to. I also observe if what they play reflects with the staffs mood to provide help and assist their guests. It is one of the contributing factor i believe to make the work more smooth.

  • this can substantially reduce human error given that much less number of personnel is required to get the job carried out. This brings in extra clients into the business and added reservations can be accomplished.

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