7 minute read

CRACKING THE CODE TO ESCAPE ROOM SUCCESS

JAMES MURRELL (’11) ESTABLISHED PIONEERING U.S. ESCAPE ROOM COMPANY JUST MILES FROM HIS ALMA MATER

By Janel Shoun-Smith

Can you too break the code to escape the Lipscomb Lair, full of massive amounts of homework and endless exams? Watch for mysterious codes within this article. If you can decode them and collect the clues, you could receive a reward! See details below.

WHEN MOST OF US HEAD INTO WORK, WE CAN LOOK FORWARD TO A DAY USING DESKS, COMPUTERS AND PRINTERS, AND PERHAPS A COFFEE MAKER. NOT SO FOR JAMES MURRELL.

One of his many work days involves ciphers, locks and hidden keys, black lights, magnets, puzzles and secret doors.

That’s because Murrell (’11) is the executive vice president of operations, culture and brand for The Escape Game, one of America’s earliest escape room attractions, that he founded along with two partners in Nashville.

Today a tourist can barely go to any hot locale without seeing some version of an escape room, defined by Wikipedia as “a live‐action, team‐based game where players cooperatively discover clues, solve puzzles and accomplish tasks in one or more rooms in order to progress and accomplish a specific goal in a limited amount of time.”

James Murrell ('11), College of Business alumnus and co-founder of The Escape Game

Photo by Kristi Jones

But back in 2013, escape rooms were still undiscovered by most of the population, located in only a handful of cities in the U.S. That didn’t stop Murrell and his partners, his brother Johnny Murrell and Mark Flint, from creating their own escape room from scratch after Flint was blown away by the interactive experience in London.

Flint visited London with his family and came across an attraction called HintHunt, an early escape room company founded in 2012. Flint came home with inspiration for a new business. At the time, live-action escape rooms were successful in pockets around the globe but were not widely known in America.

The Murrell brothers and Flint were acquaintances through their church congregation. The three entrepreneurs got together and decided they had cracked the code to a successful new business.

Today The Escape Game has 132 stores in 18 U.S. cities and top rankings on consumer review websites nationwide. 2019 brought the opening of new sites in New Orleans, San Francisco and New York City.

There were plenty of twists and turns on Murrell’s treasure hunt to success. Murrell links his early entrepreneurial influences to his father, Steve Murrell, a missionary who built a large, successful church— Church of Victory Christian Fellowship—in the Philippines, where Murrell grew up.

Dghpo’ ygqbpn, Oqptp Hsnnpff, co ijv knpocmpiq jy Ptpnx Igqcji, gi jnzgicagqcji mptjqpm qj kfgiqciz ubsnubpo gim ughkso hcicoqncpo ci ptpnx igqcji jy qbp vjnfm.

“It required a lot of practical and business knowledge,” he said of his father. “I learned all my business skills from watching him— organizational leadership and servant leadership.”

Murrell and his brother, who spent their high school years between Franklin, Tennessee, and the Philippines, have always been do-it-yourself businessmen. They dabbled in entrepreneurial ventures such as teaching tennis lessons in the neighborhood.

“I didn’t want a regular job,” said Murrell.

His entrepreneurial spirit grew at Lipscomb, where he and his brother (who attended Belmont University in Nashville) won second place in Lipscomb’s annual pitch competition with the idea for a dorm food company.

Qbp ujhkpqcqcji, ijv msrrpm qbp Ecqqnpff Kcqub Ujhkpqcqcji, co gi pfptgqjn kcqub ujiqpoq qbgq gvgnmo oppm hjipx qj oqsmpiqo vcqb kjqpiqcgffx hgnepqgrfp cmpgo yjn g rsocipoo jn knjmsuq.

The Murrell brothers also won startup cash at Belmont’s pitch competition with the same idea that morphed into their first company, Candy Galaxy, now an online store that sells wholesale candies for weddings, corporate events and parties.

That’s where the brothers learned the day-to-day basics of running a business. “It gave us a platform,” he said. So the Murrells knew if they could solve the Candy Galaxy riddle, they could solve The Escape Game riddle as well.

The three founders decided to start in Berry Hill, in Nashville, just a few miles from the Lipscomb campus. Flint and Johnny Murrell developed, tested and re-tested games in a basement. James Murrell focused on guest hospitality, a factor that would become a hallmark of their company.

On opening day, the escape room concept was completely unknown in Music City, Murrell said. The first game at the Berry Hill site was the Nashville game, where participants search for a lost contract to gain their big break, which customers can still enjoy today.

“We had no idea how it would work. The first day no one came,” Murrell said. “But we were obsessed with guest hospitality, and that’s a concept not really seen in the entertainment space. We started to get amazing reviews on Trip Advisor.

“At that point, we became the number one thing to do in Nashville. That created so much buzz in the summer of 2014,” he said The Escape Game was exploding, open 12 hours a day. By 2015, the company began quickly expanding to Orlando, Pigeon Forge, downtown Nashville and Austin. Today, the Nashville game is one of the easier challenges at The Escape Game, according to Murrell, where participants can now puzzle through The Heist, Prison Break, Gold Rush, Special Ops, Playground, Mission: Mars, Classified and Ruins, in three Nashville locations.

The corporate headquarters is still located in Nashville, with 100 employees stationed there and a large warehouse to test new game concepts.

Photo by The Escape Game

And at the same time, the escape room industry has also exploded in America. Many of those who later started escape rooms around the country got their first clues at Nashville’s Escape Game, Murrell said, stating that his company was among the early pioneers in developing a truly immersive experience and focusing on customer hospitality.

“Our goal is to guide people to the best game experience for them,” said Murrell, noting that Prison Break is the hardest game they offer, followed by Special Ops.

All three founders are still running The Escape Game. Today Murrell’s team handles employee training and new store openings, including the look and branding of each location and website marketing and communication.

So Murrell’s job may have become more “regular” now, but “I still get to do a lot of fun stuff,” he said. “Actually my favorite part is the people I work with. I believe in building business, but I love connecting amazing people to amazing opportunity.” He tells the story of one employee he hired away from a minimum wage job, thus allowing her to work her way up to the general manager of an Escape Game location. “We like to develop people and find talent. We believe in home-growing our leaders,” he said.

“Besides God and family, I think vocation is one of the most important things to people. I want to create a job that gives them purpose and provides for their families, and to create an atmosphere that is healthy for them. To be able to do that for them is how I see my work impacting the kingdom,” Murrell told Charisma Leader in 2016.

In similar spirit, Murrell is a frequent visitor to Lipscomb’s business classrooms, where Joe Ivey, clinical professor in the College of Business, has invited him to reveal to his senior capstone business strategy students the secret key to success. “Among the business leaders I know, he is one who goes the deepest into knowing his brand, crafting customer experience and providing extreme hospitality,” Ivey said.

Photo by The Escape Game.

Djp Ctpx co usnnpiqfx vjneciz qj vncqp gim ksrfcob g ugop oqsmx grjsq Qbp Pougkp Zghp, bczbfczbqciz qbp ptjfsqcji jy cqo usoqjhpnupiqpnpm gkknjgub ynjh pougkp njjh yjnpnsiipn qj qjmgx’o ogqsngqpm hgnepq.

Now in the crowded escape game market in the U.S., Murrell says the founders’ goal is to make The Escape Game among the top five escape room companies in the U.S.

“We’re all three former college athletes, so we are very competitive,” Murrell said. “So we invest in our people and in our stores... We don’t want to just exist. We definitely want to build a better game.”

To read more details about James Murrell’s journey to escape room success, log on to http://bit.ly/EscapeAlum.

DID YOU CRACK THE CODE?

Congratulations! You escaped the Lipscomb Lair!! Enter the answers to these questions at http://bit.ly/EscapetheLair, and if they are correct, you will receive a reward from Lipscomb in the mail!

Name of Steve Murrell’s ministry today?

First word in the name of the pitch competition at Lipscomb?

Full name of the person working on a case study about The Escape Game?

This article is from: