4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 3 September 2024
⏱️ 31 minutes
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Nike’s streak as the undisputed leader in the activewear category spans generations, but the brand is facing its most significant hurdles in decades. However, recent shifts in leadership, oversupply issues and a botched direct-to-consumer strategy have chipped away at its once-untouchable brand image. As challengers like Hoka and On gain ground, and archrival Adidas surges, Nike faces mounting pressure to innovate and reconnect with consumers.
“Nike remains a behemoth, … but all is not well,” says Miller. “The brand is on course for its worst financial performance in over a quarter of a century, and unfortunately for Nike, trouble is happening everywhere, all over the brand.”
This week on The Debrief, BoF executive editor Brian Baskin and senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young sit down with sports correspondent Daniel-Yaw Miller to explore how Nike fell off track and the strategic moves it’s making to reclaim its market dominance.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular B.OF professional stories with the correspondents who created them. |
0:25.4 | I'm executive editor Brian Baskin. |
0:27.3 | And I'm senior correspondent Sheena Butler Young. |
0:31.7 | Nike is the most recognizable name in athletic footwear and apparel. |
0:36.3 | The $50 billion company spent the better part of the |
0:39.3 | last two decades riding high as the incumbent leader of all things sport. At the height of its glory days, |
0:45.3 | Nike's bold marketing campaigns and iconic slogan, Just Do It, became the stuff business school |
0:51.2 | case studies are made of. But recently, cracks in Nike's armor have become |
0:56.2 | hard to ignore. A botched direct-to-consumer rollout, the appointment of a tech-focused CEO in |
1:02.7 | 2019, followed by the departure of some of the marketers and merchants from the brand's glory days, |
1:08.2 | have taken a noticeable toll on the swoosh. |
1:15.6 | New competitors, including Hoka and On, are stealing attention and market share, |
1:18.8 | and a resurgent Adidas is posing a real threat. |
1:22.1 | Meanwhile, activist investors may be circling. |
1:29.2 | B.O.F. sports correspondent Daniel Yao Miller has been chronicling Nike's slide and the company's efforts to write itself. Recently, he wrote about Nike's Olympics marketing campaign titled, Winning isn't for |
1:35.2 | everyone, and the increasing public speculation about the future of CEO John Donahoe. Hi, Daniel, |
1:41.7 | welcome to the debrief podcast. Thank you, Sheena. It's good to be back. |
1:46.5 | So I came of age in the Nike era of Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods, the true glory days where |
1:51.9 | people lined up around the block for a pair of Jordans. And you weren't cool if you didn't have a |
1:56.5 | swoosh logo on your pair of sneakers. Brian, does any of this ring true to you? Do you remember those days when Nike was the hottest brand ever? |
2:04.8 | And do you have a moment like that? |
2:07.3 | Oh, absolutely. |
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