Melani’s first agency job in New York introduced her to a special kind of workplace chaos — the kind where the office microwave was feared, the creative energy was electric, and where she realized pretty quickly that she’d accidentally found her people.
Ask Melani how she works, and she’ll tell you her timing is flexible, but the deadline is soon. She likes options (many of them), believes no brand ad should ever carry the weight of ten competing messages, and often pauses to confirm that what we’re aiming for is worth aiming for. She’s equally comfortable being the calm in the chaos and the person reminding the room that, at the end of the day, “we’re making ads”—a philosophy that somehow keeps the work sharper and the stakes healthier. Her favorite compliment? “Thanks for teaching me that.”
Outside the agency, Melani is a curious contradiction: someone partial to the number 17, someone who will go to great lengths to avoid mustard in all its forms, and someone who reads WebMD far more than any doctor would recommend—usually for symptoms she doesn’t have. Her version of self-care is watching Penn State football or a relaxing bath for a moment of quiet after a day of many decisions. If teleportation ever becomes an option, she’s first in line.