Multi-room atmospheres

Par Christophe · 15 June 2026

An establishment is not just a single atmosphere.

It is multiple spaces, multiple paces, multiple needs.

And yet, many venues play the same music everywhere.

It’s not “bad”.

It’s just rarely optimal.

Here is a simple strategy to manage a multi-zone atmosphere (reception, treatment rooms, relaxation) without turning music into a project.

Why “the same music everywhere” ends up causing problems

Because each zone has a different purpose:

– the reception area must be welcoming,
– the treatment room must be stable,
– relaxation must be slow.

A music selection perfect for the treatment room can seem “flat” at reception.

Lively music at reception can disrupt relaxation in the treatment room.

The 3-zone strategy (ready-to-use)

Zone 1 — Reception

Objective: reassure, give a premium impression, set the tone.

– bright, soft atmosphere
– discreet volume

Zone 2 — Treatment rooms

Objective: protect the session.

– stability
– no disruptions
– no changes during the treatment

Zone 3 — Relaxation / exit

Objective: prolong the effect and gently re-anchor.

– slower
– more atmospheric

The client benefit

– smoother journey
– sense of a “controlled” space
– less mental clutter

The operational benefit

– fewer decisions
– fewer inconsistencies depending on the staff
– a stable atmosphere, even during rush hours

Setup (30 minutes)

1. Choose 1 station per zone (StarkStream)
2. Standardize the volume
3. Write down a simple rule:
– Reception = Station A
– Treatment rooms = Station B
– Relaxation = Station C
4. Appoint a contact person (one person)

Mistakes to avoid

– Too many stations (you lose consistency)
– Too many changes (you create an extra task)
– Volume adjusted “by feel” (it shows)

Conclusion

Multi-zone is one of the most effective levers to increase perceived quality, without increasing complexity.

If you want to start simple: do reception + treatment rooms. This is often where the impact is most visible.