How Mercedes CMO Melody Lee Is Selling Ideas, Not Just Cars
As the marketing brain behind Mercedes in the U.S., Lee is pushing to get in front of an entirely different audience.
Join MotorTrend in our celebration of Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Each week, you'll hear from the incredible people who have left their mark on the automotive industry.
Building cars is an old business, and right behind that is the business of selling them. Melody Lee doesn’t sell cars, per se. Because as Mercedes-Benz North America’s straight-talking chief marketing officer, tasked with changing intangibles like brand perception and awareness, she’s pushing for the more abstract.
Obviously, the end goal of any for-profit company is to make the profit arrow go up and to the right, and that's perhaps even more true for well-established companies. After all, it's how they've managed to stay in business for a long time, and Mercedes' history can be traced back nearly 140 years. But Lee has the luxury (and challenge) of working beyond simply convincing you to buy the latest E-Class. Leave the relentless selling of cars to the startups. It’s her job to preserve what’s come before her—and to influence today’s brand and products so they’ll be around for 140 years more.
Taking a Seat at the Table
You’ve probably seen some of what Lee does even if you don't know it. She and her team are responsible for developing commercial social media, establishing dealership marketing, organizing consumer and branded events, and expanding Mercedes’ overall digital experience. Throughout all that, Lee has made sure to position her company alongside multicultural leaders to make creative decisions.

Mercedes-Benz
After Lee’s team came up with the idea, Mercedes has held an event called The Table where a curated list of guests participate in an evening of cultural experiences and discussion. The inaugural event took place in Los Angeles and featured Black artists and creators such as Alicia Keys, Andra Day, and Ayoni.
A more recent one in New York City (at which MotorTrend was in attendance) hosted Asian American actors such as John Cho and BD Wong, with Lee acting as the evening’s emcee. The menu was designed and catered by a local Asian American restaurateur. All the products and fragrances used were Asian heritage-inspired and from an AAPI-owned brand.
No one was expected to sign the paperwork on a new Benz by the evening’s end. So, what was the point?

Lee acting as emcee at The Table.
“It’s good business sense,” Lee told MotorTrend in a recent interview. She broke it down further. “One hundred percent of growth in automotive is going to come from multicultural segments. Our traditional segments and audiences are shrinking because the entire makeup of the United States is changing. All our growth is coming from the Black, Hispanic, and Asian American communities. That’s where the opportunity is.”
But it goes beyond simply pandering to the next target demographic. “There’s a lot multicultural marketing for the sake of saying you do it, being performative, checking a box, or trying to be ‘responsible,’” Lee said. “But for me, it’s, ‘If we're going to get our growth for multicultural segments, how are we going to tackle that? How are we going to go after it? What are everyone's ideas for doing that?’”

Lee, pictured with actor John Cho, at The Table.
In addition to supporting the local small business owners with Mercedes’ checkbook, Lee wants to provide an authentic experience that focuses on these communities in a way that Mercedes might not have before, and to start a conversation with these audiences that comes from a place where they might not be used to being engaged by the brand. Even if it means just starting to build the relationship by inviting people to something like The Table.



