The workspace
that makes the right
impression.
There's no neutral position on music in your spaces.
Nobody appointed silence as the official soundtrack of professional spaces.
The sound wasn't in the brief, so you got nothing, or whatever's been running since 2014. Your brand has a visual identity, a considered interior. Sound was the one thing nobody wanted to own.
See what it sounds like when the brief includes the roomThe reception area that wins the meeting before it starts.
A client walks in and waits. Before the meeting starts, they've already read the room: the desk, the lighting, whether this is the kind of firm that sweats the details. There's something playing: low, composed, unhurried. Not the office radio. Not a streaming playlist left running. Something that sounds like it was chosen. That detail doesn't announce itself. But it completes the picture. A room that sounds deliberate feels deliberate.
Your team works better in it too. Not because orchestral music is a productivity intervention (it isn't), but because the right audio environment settles people. Focus comes more easily when the room isn't working against it. Silence has its own pressure. The wrong music has its own distraction. Neither is neutral.
Sound is the one design element most professional businesses never consider. That's a gap in the brief that costs you without anyone being able to account for it.
Different hours call for different sounds.
A professional space has distinct moments: the focused morning, the warmer afternoon, the client-facing impression. We'd programme for all three, not pick one and leave it running. What we'd choose for your offices would start from your brand and your brief.
These playlists were chosen for this installation, not as a template. Yours would be built differently, around your brand, your team, and your client experience. Schedules are set up during onboarding and adjustable remotely at any time.
Explore our playlist libraryMake this your space.
Talk to RevMusic about music direction for your offices, reception areas, and client-facing environments.