1950 – 1959
Nike, originally known as Blue Ribbon Sports (BRS), was founded by University of Oregon track athlete Philip Knight and his coach Bill Bowerman in January 1964. The company initially operated as a distributor for Japanese shoe maker Onitsuka Tiger (now ASICS), making most sales at track meets out of Knight's automobile
Bill Bowerman was a nationally respected track and field
coach at the University of Oregon, who was constantly seeking ways to give his
athletes a competitive advantage. He experimented with different track
surfaces, re-hydration drinks and – most importantly – innovations in running
shoes. But the established footwear manufacturers of the 1950s ignored the
ideas he tried to offer them, so Bowerman began cobbling shoes for his runners.
Phil Knight was a talented middle-distance runner from
Portland, who enrolled at Oregon in the fall of 1955 and competed for
Bowerman’s track program. Upon graduating from Oregon, Knight earned his MBA in
finance from Stanford University, where he wrote a paper that proposed quality
running shoes could be manufactured in Japan that would compete with more
established German brands. But his letters to manufacturers in Japan and Asia
went unanswered, so Knight took a chance.
He made a cold-call on the Onitsuka Co. in Kobe, Japan, and
persuaded the manufacturer of Tiger shoes to make Knight a distributor of Tiger
running shoes in the United States. When the first set of sample shoes arrived,
Knight sent several pairs to Bowerman, hoping to make a sale. Instead, Bowerman
stunned Knight by offering to become his partner, and to provide his footwear
design ideas to Tiger.
1960 - 1969
They shook hands to form Blue Ribbon Sports, pledged $500 each and placed their first order of 300 pairs of shoes in January 1964. Knight sold the shoes out of the trunk of his green Plymouth Valiant, while Bowerman began ripping apart Tiger shoes to see how he could make them lighter and better, and enlisted his University of Oregon runners to wear-test his creations. In essence, the foundation for what would become Nike had been established.But Bowerman and Knight each had full-time jobs - Bowerman at Oregon and Knight at a Portland accounting firm - so they needed someone to manage the growing requirements of Blue Ribbon Sports. Enter Jeff Johnson, whom Knight had met at Stanford. A runner himself, Johnson became the first full-time employee of Blue Ribbon Sports in 1965, and quickly became an invaluable utility man for the start-up company.
1970 - 1979
He created the first product brochures, print ads and marketing materials, and even shot the photographs for the company’s catalogues. Johnson established a mail-order system, opened the first BRS retail store (located in Santa Monica, Calif.) and managed shipping/receiving. He also designed several early Nike shoes, and even conjured up the name Nike in 1971.Around this same time, the relationship between BRS and Onitsuka was falling apart. Knight and Bowerman were ready to make the jump from being a footwear distributor to designing and manufacturing their own brand of athletic shoes.
One particular pair of shoes made a very different
impression – literally – on the dozen or so runners who tried them. They
featured a new innovation that Bowerman drew from his wife’s waffle iron – an
outsole that had waffle-type nubs for traction but were lighter than
traditional training shoes.
With a new logo, a new name and a new design innovation,
what BRS now needed was an athlete to endorse and elevate the new Nike line.
Fittingly for the company founded by Oregonians, they found such a young man
from the small coastal town of Coos Bay, Ore.
His name: Steve Prefontaine.
Prefontaine electrified the packed stands of Oregon’s
Hayward Field during his college career from 1969 to 1973. He never lost any
race at his home track over the one-mile distance, and quickly gained national
exposure thanks to cover stories on magazines like Sports Illustrated and his
fourth-place finish in 1972 in the 5,000m in Munich.
Pre challenged Bowerman, Johnson and BRS in general to stretch their creative talents. In turn, he became a powerful ambassador for BRS and Nike after he graduated from Oregon, making numerous appearances on behalf of BRS and sending pairs of Nike shoes to prospective runners along with personal notes of encouragement.
Pre challenged Bowerman, Johnson and BRS in general to stretch their creative talents. In turn, he became a powerful ambassador for BRS and Nike after he graduated from Oregon, making numerous appearances on behalf of BRS and sending pairs of Nike shoes to prospective runners along with personal notes of encouragement.
His tragic death at age 24 in 1975 cut short what many
believed would have been an unparalleled career in track – at the time of his
death, he held American records in seven distances from 2,000m to 10,000m. But Prefontaine’s fiery spirit lives on
within Nike; Knight has often said that Pre is the “soul of Nike.”
1980 - 1989
Nike entered the 1980s on a roll, thanks to the successful
launch of Nike Air technology in the Tailwind running shoe in 1979. By the end
of 1980, Nike completed its IPO and became a publicly traded company. This
began a period of transition, where several of Nike’s early pioneers decided to
move on to other pursuits. Even Phil Knight stepped down as president for more
than a year in 1983-1984, although he remained the chairman of the board and
CEO.
By the mid-1980s, Nike had slipped from its position as the
industry leader, in part because the company had badly miscalculated on the
aerobics boom, giving upstart competitors an almost completely open field to
develop the business. Fortunately, the debut of a new signature shoe for an NBA
rookie by the name of Michael Jordan in 1985 helped bolster Nike’s bottom line.
In 1987, Nike readied a major product and marketing campaign designed to regain the industry lead and differentiate Nike from its competitors. The focal point was the Air Max, the first Nike footwear to feature Nike Air bags that were visible. The campaign was supported by a memorable TV ad whose soundtrack was the original Beatles’ recording of ‘Revolution.’
In 1987, Nike readied a major product and marketing campaign designed to regain the industry lead and differentiate Nike from its competitors. The focal point was the Air Max, the first Nike footwear to feature Nike Air bags that were visible. The campaign was supported by a memorable TV ad whose soundtrack was the original Beatles’ recording of ‘Revolution.’
A year later, Nike built on its momentum from the
‘Revolution’ campaign by launching a broad yet empowering series of ads with
the tagline “Just do it.” The series included three ads with a young two-sport
athlete named Bo Jackson, who espoused the benefits of a new cross-training
shoe.
In 1989, Nike’s cross-training business exploded, thanks in
part to the incredibly popular “Bo Knows” ad campaign. By the end of the
decade, Nike had regained its position as the industry leader, the first and
only time a company in the athletic footwear/apparel industry has accomplished
such a feat. Nike has never relinquished that position again.
1990 - 1999
Buoyed by a series of successful product launches and marketing campaigns, Nike entered the 1990s by christening its beautiful world headquarters in suburban Portland, Oregon. In November of 1990, Portland became the first home to a new retail-as-theatre experience called Niketown, which would earn numerous architectural design and retail awards and spawn more than a dozen other Niketown locations around the USA and internationally.
While Nike had designed footwear and apparel for golf and
soccer for a number of years, the mid-1990s signalled a deepening commitment to
truly excel in these sports. In 1994, Nike signed several individual players
from what would be the World Cup-winning Brazilian National Team. In 1995, Nike
signed the entire team, and began designing the team’s distinctive uniform.
Nike also signed the US men’s and women’s national soccer teams, as well as
dozens of national teams around the world.
In 1996, Nike Golf landed a vastly talented but
as-yet-unproven young golfer named Eldrick “Tiger” Woods for a reported $5
million per year. Competitors laughed and critics howled at Nike’s ‘folly,’
until Tiger won the 1997 Masters by a record 12 strokes. No one is laughing
now.
Nike also began investing in the sport of cycling, including
a promising young cyclist who appeared to be on his way to success until he was
diagnosed with cancer. He lost most of his sponsors, but Nike elected to stay
with him. In 1999, Lance Armstrong’s incredible comeback resulted in the first
of what would be seven consecutive Tour de France titles.
2000-present
Nike rang in the new millennium with a new footwear cushioning system called Nike Shox, which debuted during Sydney in 2000. The development of Nike Shox culminated more than 15 years of perseverance and dedication, as Nike designers stuck with their idea until technology could catch up. The result was a cushioning and stability system worthy of joining Nike Air as the industry’s gold standard.
Just as Nike’s products have evolved, so has Nike’s approach
to marketing. The 2002 “Secret Tournament” campaign was Nike’s first truly
integrated, global marketing effort. Departing from the traditional “big
athlete, big ad, big product” formula, Nike created a multi-faceted consumer
experience in support of the World Cup.
“Secret Tournament” incorporated advertising, the Internet, public relations, retail and consumer events to create excitement for Nike’s soccer products and athletes in a way no single ad could ever achieve. This new integrated approach has become the cornerstone for Nike marketing and communications.
“Secret Tournament” incorporated advertising, the Internet, public relations, retail and consumer events to create excitement for Nike’s soccer products and athletes in a way no single ad could ever achieve. This new integrated approach has become the cornerstone for Nike marketing and communications.
Today, Nike continues to seek new and innovative ways to
develop superior athletic products, and creative methods to communicate
directly with our consumers. The company has continued to expand in new ways,
including strong growth in China and a deal to become the official sponsor of
the National Football League (NFL) beginning in 2012.
At an investor meeting at its world headquarters in June
2011, NIKE, Inc. announced an increase to its fiscal 2015 revenue target to a
new range of $28-30 billion, up from its previous target of $27 billion
announced in May 2010. The company also increased its fiscal 2015 revenue
target for the NIKE Brand to $24-25 billion, up from its previous target of $23
billion.
President and CEO Mark Parker said: “At NIKE, Inc. we run a complete offense, and it’s based on a core commitment to innovation. That’s how we stay opportunistic, serve the athlete, reward our shareholders, and continue to lead our industry.”
President and CEO Mark Parker said: “At NIKE, Inc. we run a complete offense, and it’s based on a core commitment to innovation. That’s how we stay opportunistic, serve the athlete, reward our shareholders, and continue to lead our industry.”
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