4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 10 June 2025
⏱️ 22 minutes
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Nike has been synonymous with sports for decades, but that cultural and commercial cachet has mostly been driven by male athletes like Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods (Serena Williams being a prominent exception). As a result, despite substantial sales, Nike historically struggled to resonate authentically with women, and has at times faced pointed criticism from female athletes, employees and consumers.
That appears to be changing. Nike’s “So Win” campaign, which launched with the brand’s first Super Bowl ad in decades, centres entirely on female athletes. A’ja Wilson’s sneaker release was a smash, and a new brand with Kim Kardashian’s Skims will be out soon. The head of Nike Women’s now leads the entire Nike brand.
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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-O-F professional stories with the correspondence who created them. |
0:17.0 | I'm senior correspondent Sheena Butler Young. And I'm executive editor, Brian Baskin. |
0:22.3 | When we talk about Nike as this omnipresent force in global sports, certain moments come to mind. |
0:28.9 | There's Michael Jordan and Just Do It. |
0:31.3 | There's Tiger Woods juggling the golf ball on his club. |
0:34.7 | And there's Colin Kaepernick's close-up. |
0:37.1 | But with a few exceptions, and Serena Williams is a big one, they're all men. |
0:42.8 | Nike sells billions of dollars worth of sneakers, apparel, and equipment to women every year, |
0:48.2 | but it's never quite connected with female athletes on that same primordial level. |
0:53.3 | But that might be changing. This year, Nike ran its first |
0:56.8 | Super Bowl ad in nearly three decades, built entirely around female athletes with the tagline, |
1:02.8 | So When. Since then, Nike has announced a new brand with Kim Kardashian skims and released a |
1:09.5 | blockbuster sneaker with WNBA star Asia Wilson. |
1:13.7 | Last month, it appointed Amy Montaigne, the head of its women's division and the architect |
1:18.6 | behind many of these moves to lead the entire Nike brand and named two other female executives |
1:24.2 | to keep hosts. Is Nike finally winning with women? My co-host, Sheena, recently set |
1:30.2 | out to answer that question. She spoke to Amy Montaane in her first interview since taking her new |
1:35.4 | role. Sheena, welcome to the hot seat. Wow, it's so nice to be in a different seat this time, I think, I hope. |
1:42.1 | Yeah, you say that now. I know. Your story actually doesn't |
1:45.8 | open with Asia Wilson or Amy Montaigne. It actually starts with a very different campaign that |
1:51.0 | launched 20 years ago. Why did you go that far back? Tell us about that. Yeah, I think in your intro, |
1:57.0 | you sort of described this already. But when we talk about Nike as having a |
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