About Tamber

Tamber is a network of professional interviewers, journalists, and audio storytellers who believe that every voice carries a fingerprint—and every story deserves to be heard. We create meaningful, personal audio keepsakes by helping people capture the voices of those they love most. Whether we’re guiding the conversation ourselves or equipping you to lead it, our goal is simple: to preserve the stories that shape us, before they fade.

Born from a shared obsession with connection and storytelling, Tamber exists to help people pause, ask better questions, and listen like it matters—because it does.

Why Audio Only?

We believe in the power of the human voice.
There’s a kind of emotional truth that lives in tone, cadence, and breath—something text alone can’t capture. Research shows that simply hearing the voice of a loved one can lower stress hormones and trigger oxytocin, the feel-good chemical that strengthens our bonds.

Meet the Founders

Ashley Adamson

Co-Founder, Tamber

Ashley has spent nearly two decades as a sports broadcaster, interviewing some of the most compelling athletes, coaches, and leaders in the world. But it wasn’t until she interviewed her own mother in 2023 that she realized the most powerful conversations often happen close to home.

So, naturally, she did what any overly sentimental person with recording equipment would do: she started interviewing everyone in her family. That snowballed into Tamber, a company rooted in the belief that every story matters, especially the ones told off-air, in the kitchen, without a PR team present.

We’ve spent our careers asking questions. Now we’re using those same skills to help others be heard—by the people who matter most.

Guy Haberman

Co-Founder, Tamber

Guy is a longtime broadcaster and podcast host known for asking the right questions and making even the most media-trained guests open up. He’s spent years helping athletes, coaches, and celebrities tell their stories—but when it comes to Tamber, things hit a little differently.

In fact, when he and Ashley first sat down to talk about the idea, something unexpected happened: Guy cried. Not once. Not twice. Three times. In public. Over sandwiches.

That’s when they both knew this work was different. It wasn’t about headlines or highlight reels—it was about helping regular people capture the stories that actually matter. The ones that live on. And if a few more lunches end in tears? Well, he’s made peace with that.