I’ve been gone a while from Nike. It’s a company that I love to the core - but the Nike I knew probably closer to 7-10 years ago. It’s agonizing seeing the change from the outside, and the destruction of such a unique place.
I was senior (in the VP ranks), and I worked across functions and geographies. I worked with some amazing leaders of those functions, and some geographies. Many have gone now, and I hardly know anyone who’s left. The institutional drain has been huge at the top. You used to have leaders who had it in their DNA, and that trickles down and amplifies and energizes the company. Of the few that are left, some are just fighting the fight because they are so loyal to the consumer and doing the right thing for their teams and it’s in their blood, but there are many new hires where it’s a tick on the resume on a path, or a career step up. External hiring in to Nike at the very senior levels has always been bad, and I would know.
I have two big issues - firstly the myopic view on diversity, which isn’t real diversity, but just a representation strategy for show. Focusing on POC and gender alone is myopic and not real diversity, which if you’ve worked in a true global company you’d would agree with (especially at this scale). You have the amazing geographies of China, Europe, APLA that if you get into, hustle (especially China and APLA) and do the stuff Nike did a decade or so ago - running $1B businesses with about 400 people. Where are they on campus? Where’s the global village in Oregon? Nike’s “global” headquarters is not that at all, especially after the Euro purge in 2019 - it’s Oregon and those that are OK moving there. From what see Nike still doesn’t have anyone who’s none-USA on their board. Isn’t half of their revenue from overseas? Listen the voice of the consumer? It has been the most poorly executed for show diversity play ever executed.
Secondly is the pitch that it’s fine to speak up. It is not. There isn’t psychological safety or the safety to speak up at Nike. That comes from a culture that speaks out of both sides of its face, perpetuated by one Excom leader in particular.
Until there is change at the top, it’s only going to get worse.