History of NIKE, Inc.
Founded as an importer of Japanese shoes, NIKE, Inc.
(Nike) has grown to be the world's largest marketer of athletic footwear and
apparel. In the United States, Nike products are sold through about 20,000
retail accounts; worldwide, the company's products are sold in about 110
countries. Both domestically and overseas Nike operates retail stores,
including Nike Towns and factory outlets. Nearly all of the items are
manufactured by independent contractors, primarily located overseas, with Nike
involved in the design, development, and marketing. In addition to its wide
range of core athletic shoes and apparel, the company also sells Nike and Bauer
brand athletic equipment, Cole Haan brand dress and casual footwear, and the
Sports Specialties line of headwear featuring licensing team logos. The company
has relied on consistent innovation in the design of its products and heavy
promotion to fuel its growth in both U.S. and foreign markets. The ubiquitous
presence of the Nike brand and its Swoosh trademark led to a backlash against
the company by the late 20th century, particularly in relation to allegations
of low wages and poor working conditions at the company's Asian contract
manufacturers.
BRS Beginnings
Nike's precursor originated in 1962, a product of the
imagination of Philip H. Knight, a Stanford University business graduate who
had been a member of the track team as an undergraduate at the University of
Oregon. Traveling in Japan after finishing up business school, Knight got in
touch with a Japanese firm that made athletic shoes, the Onitsuka Tiger Co.,
and arranged to import some of its products to the United States on a small
scale. Knight was convinced that Japanese running shoes could become
significant competitors for the German products that then dominated the
American market. In the course of setting up his agreement with Onitsuka Tiger,
Knight invented Blue Ribbon Sports to satisfy his Japanese partner's
expectations that he represented an actual company, and this hypothetical firm
eventually grew to become Nike, Inc.
At the end of 1963, Knight's arrangements in Japan came
to fruition when he took delivery of 200 pairs of Tiger athletic shoes, which
he stored in his father's basement and peddled at various track meets in the
area. Knight's one-man venture became a partnership in the following year, when
his former track coach, William Bowerman, chipped in $500 to equal Knight's
investment. Bowerman had long been experimenting with modified running shoes
for his team, and he worked with runners to improve the designs of prototype
Blue Ribbon Sports (BRS) shoes. Innovation in running shoe design eventually
would become a cornerstone of the company's continued expansion and success.
Bowerman's efforts first paid off in 1968, when a shoe known as the Cortez,
which he had designed, became a big seller.
BRS sold 1,300 pairs of Japanese running shoes in 1964, its first year, to gross $8,000. By 1965 the fledgling company had acquired a full-time employee and sales had reached $20,000. The following year, the company rented its first retail space, next to a beauty salon in Santa Monica, California, so that its few employees could stop selling shoes out of their cars. In 1967 with fast-growing sales, BRS expanded operations to the East Coast, opening a distribution office in Wellesley, Massachusetts.
Bowerman's innovations in running shoe technology continued throughout this time. A shoe with the upper portion made of nylon went into development in 1967, and the following year Bowerman and another employee came up with the Boston shoe, which incorporated the first cushioned mid-sole throughout the entire length of an athletic shoe.
Emergence of Nike in 1970s
By the end of the decade, Knight's venture had expanded
to include several stores and 20 employees and sales were nearing $300,000. The
company was poised for greater growth, but Knight was frustrated by a lack of
capital to pay for expansion. In 1971 using financing from the Japanese trading
company Nissho Iwai Corporation, BRS was able to manufacture its own line of
products overseas, through independent contractors, for import to the United
States. At this time, the company introduced its Swoosh trademark and the brand
name Nike, the Greek goddess of victory. These new symbols were initially
affixed to a soccer shoe, the first Nike product to be sold.
A year later, BRS broke with its old Japanese partner,
Onitsuka Tiger, after a disagreement over distribution, and kicked off
promotion of its own products at the 1972 U.S. Olympic Trials, the first of
many marketing campaigns that would seek to attach Nike's name and fortunes to
the careers of well-known athletes. Nike shoes were geared to the serious
athlete, and their high performance carried with it a high price.
In their first year of distribution, the company's new
products grossed $1.96 million and the corporate staff swelled to 45. In
addition, operations were expanded to Canada, the company's first foreign
market, which would be followed by Australia, in 1974.
1980s Growth through International
Expansion and Aggressive Marketing
By the start of the 1980s, Nike's combination of
groundbreaking design and savvy and aggressive marketing had allowed it to
surpass the German athletic shoe company Adidas AG, formerly the leader in U.S.
sales. In December 1980, Nike went public, offering two million shares of
stock. With the revenues generated by the stock sale, the company planned
continued expansion, particularly in the European market. In the United States,
plans for a new headquarters on a large, rural campus were inaugurated, and an
East Coast distribution center in Greenland, New Hampshire, was brought on
line. In addition, the company bought a large plant in Exeter, New Hampshire,
to house the Nike Sport Research and Development Lab and also to provide for
more domestic manufacturing capacity. The company had shifted its overseas
production away from Japan at this point, manufacturing nearly four-fifths of
its shoes in South Korea and Taiwan. It established factories in mainland China
in 1981.
In early 1986 Nike announced expansion into a number of
new lines, including casual apparel for women, a less expensive line of
athletic shoes called Street Socks, golf shoes, and tennis gear marketed under
the name 'Wimbledon.' By mid-1986 Nike was reporting that its earnings had
begun to increase again, with sales topping $1 billion for the first time. At
that point, the company sold its 51 percent stake in Nike-Japan to its Japanese
partner; six months later, Nike laid off ten percent of its U.S. employees at
all levels in a major cost-cutting strategy.
Following these moves, Nike announced a drop in revenues and earnings in 1987, and another round of restructuring and budget cuts ensued, as the company attempted to come to grips with the continuing evolution of the U.S. fitness market. Only Nike's innovative Air athletic shoes provided a bright spot in the company's otherwise erratic progress, allowing the company to regain market share from rival Reebok International Ltd. in several areas, including basketball and cross-training.
The following year, Nike branched out from athletic
shoes, purchasing Cole Haan, a maker of casual and dress shoes, for $80
million. Advertising heavily, the company took a commanding lead in sales to
young people to claim 23 percent of the overall athletic shoe market. Profits
rebounded to reach $100 million in 1988, as sales rose 37 percent to $1.2
billion. Later that year, Nike launched a $10 million television campaign
around the theme 'Just Do It' and announced that its 1989 advertising budget
would reach $45 million.
Market Dominance in the Early to Mid-1990s
In 1990 the company sued two competitors for copying
the patented designs of its shoes and found itself engaged in a dispute with
the U.S. Customs Service over import duties on its Air Jordan basketball shoes.
In 1990 the company's revenues hit $2 billion. The company acquired Tetra
Plastics Inc., producers of plastic film for shoe soles. That year, the company
opened Nike Town, a prototype store selling the full range of Nike products, in
Portland, Oregon.
By 1991 Nike's Visible Air shoes had enabled it to
surpass its rival Reebok in the U.S. market. In the fiscal year ending May 31,
1991, Nike sales surpassed the $3 billion mark, fueled by record sales of 41
million pairs of Nike Air shoes and a booming international market. Its efforts
to conquer Europe had begun to bear fruit; business there grew by 100 percent
that year, producing more than $1 billion in sales and gaining the second place
market share behind Adidas. Nike's U.S. shoe market had, in large part,
matured, slowing to five percent annual growth, down from 15 percent annual
growth from 1980 and 1988. The company began eyeing overseas markets and
predicted ample room to grow in Europe. Nike's U.S. rival Reebok, however, also
saw potential for growth in Europe, and by 1992 European MTV was glutted with
athletic shoe advertisements as the battle for the youth market heated up
between Nike, Reebok, and their European competitors, Adidas and Puma.
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