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Better Business
Starts with Sleep

And is costly without it. Sleep deprivation costs employers $7,500 per employee per year. 1

Mental Health
Starts with Sleep

And takes a dive without it. Insufficient sleep is a comorbidity of the top mental health concerns like anxiety and depression.2

Physical Health
Starts with Sleep

And suffers without it. Sleep deprivation increases risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and lowers fertility rates.3,4,5

Productivity Starts with Sleep

And crumbles without it. Even increasing sleep from 6 hours per night to 8 hours results in 400% improvement to cognitive performance.6

Why this Matters for Work.

Mental Health

We all sleep, making it a stigma-free solution for mental health at work. Studies show that sleep deprivation causes the amygdala, a region of the brain active in anxiety and depression, to become overactive by 60%2

Physical Health

Sleeping soundly improves cardiovascular health better than exercise, increases immunity to vaccines, and is essential for fertility.3,4,5


Studies show that sleep deprivation can make you 45% more likely to get heart disease3, 56% more likely to develop type 2 diabetes4, 300% more likely to contract a virus7, and consume 600 calories more per day.8


If you are woman getting insufficient sleep, you could be 80% more likely to suffer from fertility issues that make it harder to get pregnant.5

Productivity

Sleeping 8 hours each night improves productivity by 400%6, and puts a stop to costly productivity loss.*


*Sleep deprivation costs your company $7,500 per employee each year.

night sleep

Be at Your Best with A Good Night’s Rest

Rapidly gain insight into what is hindering your sleep with our Sleep Log.


Calm racing thoughts and fall asleep quickly during our nightly Sleep Sessions.


Learn best practices that support restorative sleep through brief Sleep Lessons.


Troubleshoot your unique problems with expert Sleep Coaches.


Learn More
Sleep Coaches

Tailored Guidance.

There is no one-size-fits-all solution to sleep.


​​Our Sleep Coaches provide custom sleep solutions that scale for your team.

Sleep Sessions

Fall Asleep Fast.

80% of our users fall asleep within 15 minutes.


Humans make innovative connections during critical phases of sleep. Tossing and turning eats into valuable sleep time.

Sleep Lessons

Frictionless Learning

Better sleep in 2 minutes a day.


Our learning is accessible and engaging, designed with the timetable of your business in mind.

Sleep Data

Decipher Sleep Data

Quantifiably track and change sleep patterns.


Sleep data is a dead end. Learn precise changes to improve your company's sleep. Then track progress.

Chorus Replaces Legacy

Chorus Replaces Legacy, Stale Options with a Remarkable Solution

Instead of side-effect-ridden drugs, apps that simply track but don’t improve sleep, boring worksheets and programs, or fear-mongering about how lack of sleep causes terrible health effects…

Chorus is an all-natural solution that actually improves sleep, and is a delightful, easy to use mobile app, built for today’s needs.

Results and Outcomes are Our Top Priority

Over

80% of people experienced improved sleep

in internal studies
Reporting & Insights

Reporting & Insights

Chorus is purpose built for business insight.

Access reports on clinical outcomes including sleep, anxiety, stress, and productivity to drive business decisions.


Unlock insight with aggregated sleep data that can be broken down by categories like geography/office, department, gender to give leaders insight into what employees may need extra support.

We are committed to clinical rigor and scientific efficacy

Chorus’ evidence-based approach resulted in over 80% of users experiencing improved sleep in internal studies, and is being further validated in this randomized clinical trial, the gold standard in science, led by Harvard Psychology Researcher David Weissman, Ph.D.


Studies are an ongoing part of our business, as they are critical to our commitment to clinical rigor and scientific efficacy.

We are committed to clinical rigor and scientific efficacy

The Chorus product is reviewed by our Scientific Advisory Board

Patricia A. Areán, Ph.D,

Patricia A. Areán, Ph.D,

Professor in psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington, and former UCSF professor for 30 years
David Weissman, Ph.D,

David Weissman, Ph.D,

mental health, neuroscience and psychology researcher at Harvard University
Eli Susman

Eli Susman

Sleep researcher at the University of California, Berkeley working with Dr. Harvey in the Golden Bear Sleep and Mood Research Clinic

What
Employees
Are Saying

Unlock the Best from Your Organization

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Get started with the app!

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Footnotes

    1. Bottom line, healthcare costs: Anderson LH, Whitebird RR, Schultz J, McEvoy CE, Kreitzer MJ, Gross CR. Healthcare utilization and costs in persons with insomnia in a managed care population. Am J Manag Care. 2014 May;20(5):e157-65. PMID: 25326930. Bottom line, productivity: Rosekind MR, Gregory KB, Mallis MM, Brandt SL, Seal B, Lerner D. The cost of poor sleep: workplace productivity loss and associated costs. J Occup Environ Med. 2010 Jan;52(1):91-8. doi: 10.1097/JOM.0b013e3181c78c30. PMID: 20042880. Bottom line, mental health: NSC and NORC at University of Chicago, New Mental Health Cost Calculator Shows Why Investing in Mental Health is Good for Business, https://www.nsc.org/newsroom/new-mental-health-cost-calculator-demonstrates-why
    2. Mental health: Krause AJ, Simon EB, Mander BA, Greer SM, Saletin JM, Goldstein-Piekarski AN, Walker MP. The sleep-deprived human brain. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2017 Jul;18(7):404-418. doi: 10.1038/nrn.2017.55. Epub 2017 May 18. PMID: 28515433; PMCID: PMC6143346;
    3. Cardiovascular disease: Francesco Sofi, Francesca Cesari, Alessandro Casini, Claudio Macchi, Rosanna Abbate, Gian Franco Gensini, Insomnia and risk of cardiovascular disease: a meta-analysis, European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, Volume 21, Issue 1, 1 January 2014, Pages 57–64, https://doi.org/10.1177/2047487312460020.
    4. Type 2 diabetes: Francesco P. Cappuccio, Lanfranco D'Elia, Pasquale Strazzullo, Michelle A. Miller; Quantity and Quality of Sleep and Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Diabetes Care 1 February 2010; 33 (2): 414–420. https://doi.org/10.2337/dc09-1124: 56% is an average for insufficient sleep based on 28% increased risk with sleeping 5-6 hours per night and 84% increased risk with having “difficulty maintaining sleep.”
    5. Fertility: Walker, Matthew. 2018. Why We Sleep.
    6. Productivity: Walker, Matthew. 2018. Why We Sleep. Harlow, England: Penguin Books.; Van Dongen HP, Maislin G, Mullington JM, Dinges DF. The cumulative cost of additional wakefulness: dose-response effects on neurobehavioral functions and sleep physiology from chronic sleep restriction and total sleep deprivation. Sleep. 2003 Mar 15;26(2):117-26. doi: 10.1093/sleep/26.2.117. Erratum in: Sleep. 2004 Jun 15;27(4):600. PMID: 12683469.
    7. Common cold: Prather AA, Janicki-Deverts D, Hall MH, Cohen S. Behaviorally Assessed Sleep and Susceptibility to the Common Cold. Sleep. 2015 Sep 1;38(9):1353-9. doi: 10.5665/sleep.4968. PMID: 26118561; PMCID: PMC4531403.
    8. Food desire / calories: Greer SM, Goldstein AN, Walker MP. The impact of sleep deprivation on food desire in the human brain. Nat Commun. 2013;4:2259. doi: 10.1038/ncomms3259. PMID: 23922121; PMCID: PMC3763921.