Thread regarding Nike Inc. layoffs

Nike = Kodak = Nike

Title: Nike and Kodak: A Masterclass in Market Dominance and the Perils of Complacency

I’ve been thinking about the trajectories of two iconic brands—Nike and Kodak. Despite their different industries, both companies share eerily similar stories of ascension and decline, offering invaluable lessons in the business world.

1. Market Kings:

  • Nike: The Goliath of athletic wear. With strategic athlete endorsements, ki-ler marketing, and innovative products, Nike wasn’t just a brand; it was a lifestyle. They made every kid dream of being a star just by lacing up a pair of Air Jordans.
  • Kodak: The OG of photography. Kodak was the alpha and omega of capturing memories. Their innovation in film technology made photography accessible, turning “Kodak moment” into a cultural staple. If you had a camera, it was probably a Kodak.

2. Innovation Giants:

  • Nike: They didn’t just sell shoes; they sold performance. Think Air Max, Flyknit, and Nike+. Nike was at the bleeding edge of tech and design, continuously upping the ante in sportswear.
  • Kodak: Kodak didn’t sit still either. They revolutionized film and cameras, making photography simpler and more affordable. They were the Steve Jobs of film—until they weren’t.

3. The Achilles’ Heel:

  • Nike: For all its glory, Nike got too comfortable. They banked on their legacy and underestimated the competition. On, Hoka, and other upstarts with fresh ideas began nibbling at their market share. Consumers started craving innovation and sustainability, and Nike was slow on the uptake.
  • Kodak: The cautionary tale. Kodak had the keys to the digital kingdom but chose to stay in their analog comfort zone. They ignored the digital wave that would revolutionize photography, leading to a catastrophic fall from grace.

4. Legacy as a Ball and Chain:

  • Nike: Their brand became their burden. Overconfidence in their past triumphs made them sluggish in responding to new market demands.
  • Kodak: Kodak’s story is a classic case of innovator’s dilemma. They were so in love with their film legacy that they couldn’t see the digital tidal wave coming. They hesitated, competitors pounced, and the rest is history.

5. The Takeaway:

Nike and Kodak are proof that no matter how big you get, complacency is a ki-ler. Market dominance is a fleeting prize; the real game is in constant reinvention. Spot the trends, pivot hard, and don’t be afraid to disrupt your own model.

So, where does Nike go from here? Can they avoid the Kodak curse, or are they destined for a similar fate? Let’s dive in.

TL;DR:
Nike and Kodak both ruled their realms through relentless innovation but faltered due to complacency and a failure to adapt. Their stories are a stark reminder: evolve or die.

Eager to hear your thoughts!

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| 1312 views | | 10 replies (last July 25, 2024) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1tFj8luz

10 replies (most recent on top)

@ugs+1tFj8luz I think that’s correct. Nike is currently like famous architect Mike Brady. Ever seen the Brady Bunch movie? A running joke in that movie is that Mike designed his family’s home, with every commercial design he did afterwards looking much like his house. He was a one-trick pony, unaware that while his original design was good the world has since moved on.

Nike needs to stop being like Mike Brady.

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Post ID: @1jcn+1tFj8luz

I’ve full confidence in greed and bushi* skills of Nike ELT. They won’t keep stock price this low for long. Their options can’t be worthless.

When stock rises, cash out and run as fast as you can

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Post ID: @1xpw+1tFj8luz

We laid off all the innovators and promoted/replaced them with storytelling yes-women and yes-men who hardly understand the company and prioritize their own career achievements over the brand

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Post ID: @1rdy+1tFj8luz

This reads like chatGPT

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Post ID: @1scu+1tFj8luz

Digital cameras were just one example. To truly understand the broader picture, let's delve into various types of innovation beyond just the product itself.

Process Innovation: Take Amazon, for instance. Their logistics and supply chain innovations revolutionized e-commerce. From predictive stocking to same-day delivery, Amazon redefined customer expectations and operational efficiency.

Time-to-Market Innovation: Look at Tesla. They shattered the automotive mold with rapid iterations of their models. Instead of the traditional auto industry’s multi-year cycle, Tesla pushes software updates and new features at the speed of Silicon Valley.

Tools and Technology Innovation: Apple didn’t just innovate with the iPhone; they transformed the entire ecosystem. Their development of tools like the App Store created an entirely new market, allowing third-party developers to innovate and enhance the user experience continuously.

Speed of Decision-Making Innovation: Netflix’s pivot from DVDs to streaming is a classic example. Recognizing the digital shift, they swiftly moved resources and focus to streaming, outpacing competitors who were slow to adapt.

Organizational Velocity Innovation: Look at Spotify. Their "squads" model—small, cross-functional teams with the autonomy to make decisions—allowed them to innovate rapidly and stay ahead in the competitive music streaming market.

These examples show that innovation isn’t just about the product. It’s about rethinking processes, accelerating time to market, leveraging new tools, making faster decisions, and driving organizational agility. This holistic approach to innovation is what sets industry leaders apart.

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Post ID: @zqm+1tFj8luz

@uts+1tFj8luz On's running shoe technology is amazing. The most comfortable running shoes I've ever worn and they literally help propel you forward.

Hoka isn't really a serious running shoe IMO but Gen Z loves the bulky style and they're also popular with nurses, servers and other people who are on their feet all day.

The main thing is that Nike/JD gave our competitors are huge advantage when they cancelled our DTC contracts. Serious runners don't go to Nike.com to buy shoes, they go to Foot Traffic and other local stores to try them out first. When they removed Nike from the options, our competitors were happy to step in.

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Post ID: @rai+1tFj8luz

What is the “digital camera” that is ki-ling Nike?
What is the innovation brought by On or Hoka that Nike lags with? What about tennis, soccer or basketball, who’s leaving Nike obsolete?

Not saying there are no problems, but it’s not a Kodak situation. Not even an IBM situation, although the barriers of competition that existed in the past are sooooo gone.

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Post ID: @uts+1tFj8luz

I lived in Rochester NY in 1980 and it was amazing how huge Kodak was and how many people it employed in that small city, something like 80,000. The world HQ on State Street, all the film, paper, camera, copier manufacturing at Kodak Park, Hawkeye and Elmgrove. Kodak paid a bonus every year and that was a huge event in the city, all the stores and car dealers had all these big bonus day sales etc. In 25 short years it all fell apart and is now gone and is all just a memory.

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Post ID: @gfs+1tFj8luz

nice assessment and comparison

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Post ID: @vxv+1tFj8luz

Well said and a good comparison.
As On introduces Light Spray technology to the masses ahead of the Olympics this week (actual innovation and gamechanging to how product can be made at scale in the industry), it is a reminder at how sluggish Nike has been moving innovation forward.
NXT/Innovation has literally been toying with spray-on outsoles and uppers for over 8 years and still, nothing to market (On started Light Spray in that window 5yrs ago). It's symbolic of how Nike has been operating in that time: big, slow, too many competing opinions from incompetent leaders with no aligned focus, and resting on historical ways of doing things to lead decision making. Scared to take risks, scared to disrupt, scattered in ideas without concentrated effort around a few breakthroughs.
Our innovation for this Olympics is the same story as 3-4yrs ago: AIR. Same ingredients, different recipe. Nothing game changing - basically glitter and sparkles on what consumers already know and experience. Even the Olympic Colorway is a reference to the past. It's embarrassing a company of this size feels like it's moving backwards time and time again. And while this downfall has been visible internally for 4+ years in the making due to faulty strategies (laugh DEI the #1 priority in Footwear Creation for years, not anything to do with product...), it finally is showing up externally in marketshare, earnings calls, and analysts targets. Hoping this is the valley, but I've now said that a half dozen times in the past few years and it just keeps getting worse. Going to take a Hail Mary to turn this Titanic around.

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Post ID: @ugs+1tFj8luz

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