Acquired - Nike
Episode Date: July 25, 2023Nike — it’s perhaps the most iconic and most prolific brand of the modern era. On any given day, swooshes adorn the feet of more people on earth than any other footwear company — by a l...ong shot.If you read Shoe Dog or watched Air, you may think you know its history. But Shoe Dog ends in 1980, and Air… well let’s just say it’s an enjoyable piece of fiction. And it turns out (as always) that the real story is filled with far more drama, twists and business lessons than either of those works.We’ve been wanting to cover Nike for a long time, and thanks to our LPs who voted to choose this episode it’s finally here. So lace up your Vaporflys, Air Maxes, Dunks or Jordans (or your Monarchs, hey we don’t judge), head out for a long run or walk and enjoy!Links:Episode sourcesCarve Outs:Marc Andreessen on Lex Fridman and on Ben ThompsonSpeak Now (Taylor’s Version)Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Listeners, you should know David and I were texting before this debating,
do we change this thing around? Do we play with this?
Should we reorganize this section? And he texted me, let's just do it.
So in the honor of Bad Jokes by David Rosenthal, here we go. Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight
Another story on the way
Who got the truth?
Welcome to Season 13, Episode 1 of Acquired,
the podcast about great technology companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
There's an age-old question in business.
What is more important, a great product or great marketing?
Well, today we have literally the perfect case study in that very question in Nike.
Does breakthrough innovation drive that business?
Or is their core competency really around their profound advertisements and their sponsorship deals with athletes and teams
or their probably best-in-the-world brand positioning?
To understand it, we have to examine Nike's entire 60-year history,
of course, because this is acquired.
And because Shoe Dog is so good.
That's amazing. You got to start at the beginning.
So really, the question is, what makes this company
the single largest apparel business in the world today, outside of luxury,
of course? And how is it possible to be a shoe company that does over $50 billion in revenue
when they technically don't make a single shoe? So you may think you know Nike from the movie Air
or Shoe Dog, but what hasn't been told is how those
old stories tie to the gigantic shift in strategy that Nike is really in the middle of right now.
Well, LPs, we got to thank you for voting for this episode. David and I have had it sort of in our
episode backlog for two, three years. And when we put it up for a vote, the overwhelming majority
of you selected this as our next episode.
So if you also want to vote for future episodes
and become an Acquired LP,
that is acquired.fm slash LP.
If you want an update every time we drop a new episode
so you don't miss it,
you can sign up at acquired.fm slash email
and we'll be dropping little Easter eggs
and hints in those emails
to tease about what the next episode is going to be.
So that's acquired.fm slash email.
Don't miss a new episode.
And lastly, make sure you check out ACQ2, our second show where we interview people who are building their companies today, available in any podcast player.
And without further ado, listeners, as always, this show is not investment advice.
Dave and I may have investments in the companies we discuss,
and this show is for informational and entertainment purposes only.
David Rosenthal, what is that stack of books on your desk?
Oh my God, I think Amazon owes a thank you note to Acquired LPs
because I bought every Nike book out there.
I mean, my six-foot-long desk is covered in Nike books.
It's so fun to read all
of them. I thought there was just Shoe Dog. I didn't realize there was the literally over a
dozen that you and I collectively read. There's so many of them. I read thousands of pages.
But there are three books that all basically tell more or less the same story that we weave
together to come up with our core acquired Nike story here today. And I bring it up because it's actually pretty important what these three books are.
The first, of course, is Shoe Dog, the goat business memoir of all time.
The second is a book called Just Do It that was written by the journalist Donald Katz.
Ben, do you know who Donald Katz is?
Ooh, I do not.
So Don, after he wrote this book,
and I think he wrote one or two other books,
he had quite the career change.
He went on to found the company Audible.
Oh, really?
Isn't that crazy?
It's kind of cool that that was founded by a journalist.
Yeah, just wow.
So he wrote kind of the canonical
third-party journalist take on nike and then the
third book is a book called swoosh which i bet most people have not read but kind of like taste
of luxury i think people who are really in the know in the footwear industry have read this book
it was written by one jb strasser and her sister laur Beckland. J.B. Strasser is Julie Strasser,
who was the wife of Rob Strasser. Now, Rob, if you've seen the movie Air, the character played
by Jason Bateman is Rob Strasser, Nike's legendary first head of marketing. An item among many that is not discussed in the movie is that Rob,
shortly after signing Jordan, had an enormous fight with Phil Knight, left the company with
Peter Moore, who was the designer behind Jordan's, and ended up joining Adidas as CEO of Adidas
America just a few short years later.
It's like an incredible betrayal.
This is like a Judas-level betrayal.
I mean, to say he was persona non grata around Nike is an understatement of the century.
And here's this book that was written in real time by his wife as this was all happening.
Incredible.
Yeah.
So Strasser, we'll get into his contributions,
but he is probably second only to Phil Knight in willing Nike into existence.
We start, however, with the Shoe Dog story,
the origin of blue ribbon sports.
And actually a little bit before Shoe Dog starts,
in July 1948, when one Bill Bowerman
becomes the head track coach at the University of Oregon.
Now, Bill was a legendary figure.
In addition to being Nike's co-founder, along with Phil Knight.
I mean, kind of the only way to describe him is he was like a descendant of the survivors of the Oregon Trail.
The cowards never started and the weak died along the way was one of his
favorite sayings. Yes. So Bill's dad was the governor of Oregon. And Bill fought in World
War II as a major. And he actually negotiated at the end of the war, the stand down of a German
battalion. He's also such a character. He lived in a remote mountaintop in the Oregon
mountains and the mail delivery people who would come up to his home kept knocking over his mailbox
with their trucks. So he rigs the mailbox with explosives to blow up the truck the next time it
happens. And he literally blew up the truck. I mean, the stuff you could get away with in the 50s. They do not make them like that anymore.
No, they do not.
So when Bill comes home after the war,
he first coaches high school,
and then he becomes the head track coach
at the University of Oregon.
He takes this background and character that he has,
and he becomes maybe arguably
the most successful track coach in American history.
So I believe Bill coaches the first American sub four-minute milers.
He ends up coaching several Olympic teams.
He definitely turns the University of Oregon into the most prestigious track program in America.
You know, he's a national celebrity, which is pretty crazy for Oregon in the 1940s, 1950s.
Right. So a few years into Bowerman's tenure as head coach, he recruits a pretty talented
middle distance runner, freshman from Portland nearby, one Phil Knight. Now, Phil also has some
interesting Oregon roots. He's the son of Bill Knight,
who is another well-known University of Oregon alum. He was a former lawyer in Portland,
and he's the publisher of the Oregon Journal newspaper. Phil follows in his dad's footsteps.
He majors in journalism at Oregon, and he runs for Bowerman. And I would say Phil is okay as a runner.
Well, it's interesting.
Phil Knight would describe himself in his prime as an okay runner
because he was running with
the best collegiate runners in the world
coached by Bill Bowerman,
who barely gave Phil Knight the time of day.
I get the sense he was not a man of many words
and certainly almost no words of encouragement
other than run faster.
And so you've got Phil Knight.
The guy runs a four-minute, 13-second mile
and is convinced he's okay.
This is exactly what I was going to say.
I think at any other school, Phil would have been a star.
This isn't really in Shoe Dog,
but I know Phil's personality from reading so much about him
over the past couple weeks.
I think he probably went to Oregon in part because he wasn't going to be a star there. I mean,
he is, I think, the most introverted CEO that we have ever covered on Acquired. I mean,
Rockefeller was pretty introverted, but he looks like Elon Musk compared to Phil Knight. Yeah, and a lot of the CEOs that show up in these Acquired episodes are deeply private people, but it's mostly because they want to stay out
of the limelight. And when they're in the limelight, you can see that they can turn it on
and they're bright and shiny and they're sort of loving working the room. That's not Phil Knight
at all. Not at all. I mean, I was super lucky. I owed a huge thank you in my life to Phil Knight. I went to Stanford Business School.
I was one of the first classes to graduate at the Knight Management Center that he endowed there.
Didn't he give your graduation speech?
Exactly.
It was amazing.
It was kind of the first draft of Shoe Dog that he had been working on.
The book came out a couple years later.
So great.
But I remember thinking, this does not seem like the founder and CEO of
Nike. Even here talking at Stanford, the most warmly receptive audience possible, he was very
nervous. Yeah. Huh. So Knight runs at Oregon. And it's important to say, we should note about
Bowerman. He was definitely a person, a man like they don't make anymore. But despite what you
might think, he wasn't militaristic. He really was pretty innovative. He was the first track coach,
maybe college coach of any sport, who really put a focus on rest for his runners. And part of this,
famously for the Nike story too too was technology and was shoes.
So Bowerman actually taught himself how to be a cobbler and would take athletic shoes,
usually Adidas athletic shoes, and modify them or even build his own and then use his
athletes as guinea pigs to any advantage that they could have, he would be looking
for and shoes were part of it.
And the technology that Bowerman was experimenting with was crazy stuff.
He would rip shoes apart, and he would rebuild them, this is from the Nike website,
with snake skin, deer hide, or fish skin.
Goofy, crazy stuff.
And his guinea pig was Phil Knight because Phil wasn't at the front of the pack,
so he could sort of afford to experiment on him.
So very fortunate for Phil Knight and his future
that he was not the fastest runner on the Oregon team.
Exactly. This is where it all comes together.
So after Phil graduates, he goes to business school right after undergrad to Stanford,
to Stanford GSB, hence the connection.
He graduates from GSB in 1962. It's also crazy. Nike feels like such a modern company. This was a long time ago.
So in Phil's final term there at Stanford, he takes what is then the only quote-unquote
entrepreneurship course at GSB. I mean,
today there's like a hundred different entrepreneurship courses taught by the
famous Professor Frank Schallenberger, who Knight gives tons of credit to for blue ribbon sports
and ultimately Nike. And in the course for Knight's final paper, he writes the business plan
for blue ribbon sports, pretty much word for word.
His thesis is that he knows from growing up with his dad, and I think he actually maybe spent some summers at college and then at GSB working in the newsroom at the Oregon Journal.
And he knows from the photography department that high-end professional cameras had traditionally been the domain of the Germans. Leica was the
most famous camera brand. And then at this point in time in the 50s and 60s, the Japanese are
starting to enter the market. So Nikon was the big Japanese entrant. Fuji, Ricoh. Exactly. They
made great cameras and they undercut Leica on prices by a huge amount.
And he also knows about the sporting goods market from his time at Oregon, and particularly being a test pilot, as they would say, for Bill's Shoes.
And actually, the dynamics are pretty much exactly the same in the athletic goods market.
There are two companies, both German, that
dominate sports equipment. One, of course, is Adidas.
Or Adidas, as the Germans would say.
Yes, as we will get into in just a sec here. And the other one, to a lesser extent, was Puma.
Now, there was an American athletic apparel footwear maker in Converse and others.
But Converse at the time was stuck in the canvas shoe era, which was already like ancient history.
So if you know Chuck Taylor, All-Stars, you know the famous seminal Converse shoes.
Ben, if you had to guess, when do you think Chuck Taylor played basketball?
Ooh, let's see. I think if I remember
our NBA episode, the NBA was really getting going like post-war, so like the 50s. I'd guess he was
an early 50s NBA player. Yeah, you might think so contemporaneously with the time we're talking
about right now. No, Chuck Taylor played professional basketball in the 1920s. Whoa. That's when the Chuck Taylor all-star technology is from.
It's a canvas shoe.
By this point in time, the market had migrated to leather upper shoes,
of which Adidas or Adidas was the leading technology manufacturer of it.
So anyway, basketball shoes wasn't really the market yet.
It would become much, much later, as we shall see. The market was running shoes. And it was
like an okay market, but this was not the camera market. So Phil Knight's thesis here, it actually
didn't get any sort of notice or praise famously from his classmates or even really from the faculty, because they're like, okay, this is a good idea to apply Japanese low-ed disruption to the athletic
apparel market and the footwear market, but this is not a big market. The market such as it existed
was track shoes. Right. Think about how you would define a market size. There's not that many track
athletes at any given point in history, so not that interesting. And it's worth maybe saying one word on the
Adidas or Adidas story before we move back to Phil Knight and Chew Dog here,
because it's pretty crazy. So it's called Adidas because Adidas was founded by Adolf Dassler, or Adi for short, Adi Dass.
In like the 1920s?
Yes.
So after World War I, when Germany was totally decimated,
but before World War II,
he becomes like a fairly well-known elite cobbler,
shoe purveyor, track cleat purveyor to Olympians at the time.
So actually, ironically, I guess,
Jesse Owens wins the 1936 Olympics, the big American demonstration, literally beating Hitler
in Berlin, in Germany, in Adidas shoes. And actually, that was Adi Dassler taking a big risk by sneaking a pair of Adidas shoes to someone who could get them to Jesse Owens like the night before his race.
And Jesse Owens was like, oh, these are actually awesome.
And so it was like a big sort of, uh-oh, is this going to be a problem for Adi when it comes out that the American won wearing German shoes?
Interesting.
I didn't know that part of the story.
That makes sense because Adi's older brother, Rudy, worked with him in the business, as did Adi's wife and son. After World War II, though,
the two brothers have a huge acrimonious split. Rudy goes off and starts a separate shoe company.
It never came out what the fight was about, but one of the rumors is that Rudy went and fought in the Nazi
army and Adi didn't. And maybe that might have, I don't know, but may have had something to do with
it. Anyway, crazy. Rudy goes across town and starts a competing company after the war named Puma.
Craziest thing. Adidas, Adidas, and Puma are the two brothers. They're both the Dassler brothers.
Crazy.
Okay, so take us back to Phil Knight.
Phil has this idea in this class in business school,
this good idea but small idea
to sell Japanese track shoes in the U.S.
and undercut Adidas.
In 1963, after he graduates,
Phil decides that he's going to go off before he really starts life.
He's going to go take a trip around the world.
And he convinces one of his buddies from GSB to go with him.
They go first to Hawaii, famously, and the buddy meets a girl in Hawaii.
He's like, why would I leave Hawaii?
Yeah, I mean, smart guy.
Phil, though, goes on to Japan, and he's still thinking about this idea.
When he's in Japan, he starts going to tracks in Tokyo and watching what people are wearing,
running around the tracks.
And he observes, and he decides that the Tiger brand shoes that he's seeing are the best.
So he looks up the company that makes Tigers.
Turns out they're made by a company called Onitsuka, which is based in Kobe in the south of Japan near Osaka. And Phil, for a desperate introvert, kind of crazily, this
is how passionate he is about this idea. He gets it in his head that he's going to hop on a train
from Tokyo and just go knock on their door and say hi to the Onitsuka Corporation
and maybe ask them if he could import some of their shoes.
So the story goes that he shows up on the door,
and I can only imagine what 23-year-old Phil Knight is feeling as he's going through this.
Well, this is the other side of Phil's personality,
where he's sort of a tortured soul.
He's introverted, but he's
unbelievably driven. He has a splinter in his mind where when his buddy's like, actually,
this is pretty good. I'm going to stay in Hawaii. Phil's like, but I'm longing for something.
Yes.
There's something wrong with my existence in the world that needs to be fixed, and I need to go
and find out where I belong and what to do and how to change the world and needs to be fixed, and I need to go and find out where I belong and what to do
and how to change the world and how to build something. And I think he's got a motor that's
just different than the way that other humans operate. I've been thinking a lot about, I think
this is a David Senra saying, that the CEOs and the founders of these companies that we cover,
that he covers, they are the Genghis Khans of our time.
And Phil doesn't present as a Genghis Khan.
Yes.
But he still is.
Right.
Deep down underneath all that introvert,
he has that same drive that John Rockefeller had,
that an Elon Musk has, that a Mark Zuckerberg has.
And this unbelievably competitive spirit
is the founding element of Nike's culture
that permeates to this day. At Nike, you play to win. And I think everyone shows up to work and
you wear Nike stuff and you don't ever wear any of the competitors. Not to, hey, I want to try out
this stuff. It's like, hey, we don't do that here. That's playing for the other team. Get off the
other team. You off the other team.
You're on our team.
And you wake up every day and you show up to go to work and kick your competitors' asses.
And sometimes that takes them to questionable places that we'll talk about later in the
episode.
But Nike is among the most competitive cultures in the world.
It's funny you say Nike there as sort of founding principles, because Nike isn't going to come for quite a while here. While Phil is making this train trip down to Kobe, he suddenly has a realization. His plan is he's going to show up at the door. He's going to say that he's an American businessman, a distributor, and he wants to distribute their shoes in America, literally his business plan from the GSB class. He doesn't
have a company though, and he doesn't have a name for the company. So he has to think fast and come
up with a name. And there are multiple conflicting stories about where the name comes from. The one
that Phil tells is that the name Blue Ribbon Sports comes from him thinking back to his
childhood days, becoming a track athlete in middle school and high school.
He talks about he got cut from the baseball team
and his mom encouraged him to go out for track.
And then the blue ribbons that he won at his track meets,
you know, really helped define his personality.
It's a very nice story.
Very nice story.
That's where the name comes from.
The other story that appears in the other books
is that Phil was out drinking the night
before, either drinking Pabst Blue Ribbon PBR beers, or I think more likely the other one that
I read is Suntory Blue Ribbon Whiskey, which is a Japanese whiskey brand. We saw a billboard or
something like that, and that that's where the name Blue Ribbon came from. As with any of these stories, we'll never know, and it's probably some of both.
Yes. Either way, perhaps driven by this drive to succeed, Phil puts on the performance of a
lifetime in this meeting. He claims that he is a U.S. businessman from America. He's gone to
Stanford Business School. He has a company
called Blue Ribbon Sports. He wants to import their shoes. By the way, he ran track for the
legendary Bill Bowerman, who of course they know. He tells them that he's done market research.
He thinks that the U.S. track shoe, running shoe market could be a $1 billion market,
which he totally makes up.
He has no evidence to back this up whatsoever.
He's done lots of market research.
Lots of market research.
And it is completely wrong in both directions.
The actual U.S. market for running shoes at this point in time, I mean, there's no way it was a billion dollars.
Like maybe $100 million. Maybe. I mean, we's no way it was a billion dollars. Like maybe a hundred million, maybe?
I mean, we just were talking about like
running was not a thing.
It was a thing that athletes did.
Right.
And the running craze or the fitness craze
hadn't really started yet.
So to give you a sense, David,
I think you're probably spot on with that.
Maybe a hundred million, maybe 200 million
for track shoes in the US.
The branded athletic
shoe market all up, including all sports for the whole U.S. across all age groups, everything,
$2 billion.
Right.
So he's completely wrong on what it actually is at that point in time.
He's also completely wrong on what it would become in the other direction, thanks to Blue
Ribbon and Nike.
Right.
They had a large hand in growing. And I'll spoil it for listeners. The branded athletic
shoe market in the U.S. today is $130 billion. Now, obviously, not all of that is track and
running, but a large part is running shoes, and that's growing 5% year over year. So still a
growth market, even at that scale,
which by the way, that number 130 billion,
just to like compare it against some other things,
that is bigger than the video game market.
Wow.
Hey, I mean, not everybody has to play video games,
but everybody's got to wear shoes.
So Knight leaves this meeting,
this performance of a lifetime.
He gets an agreement from Onitsuka that if he wires them $50, they will send samples
of the shoes to his office back in the States, i.e. his family home in Portland, Oregon. So
first thing Knight does, he gets in touch with his dad. I don't know, he sends him like a telegram
or something back in Portland and asks him to wire $50 to the Onitsuka Corporation of Japan for purchasing these samples.
He gets home, I think it's two or three months later after this.
Surely the shoes would have arrived by now.
Surely the shoes would have arrived.
He rushes home, says, hi mom, hi dad, did the shoes arrive?
His dad's like, what shoes?
The shoes did not arrive. The shoes would not arrive for almost another year. Wow. A little foreshadowing in what doing
business with Onitsuka is going to be like for the fledgling blue ribbon sports. And this is just to
like get some samples to see if he can sell $50 worth of shoes. That takes over a year.
So Phil gets home. He's disappointed. He's got to start his life. He gets a job as an accountant.
He's got a business school degree. He's studying to take the CPA exams and become a licensed CPA.
And then finally, at the end of 1963, I think right around Christmas, Phil writes in Shoe Dog,
the samples show up and Phil gets them. You know, they're
great. They're what he remembers. He thinks, you know, these aren't quite maybe as good as Adidas,
but they're good enough and I can sell them cheaply enough that my business plan will work.
Right. They're way cheaper.
So Phil gets back and writes Onitsuka, says, great, I would like to be the U.S. distributor
for track and field shoes. And Onitsuka says, okay, great. You can be the distributor for the
Western United States. We already have somebody that we're working with on the East Coast,
but you can have the Western 13 states. Phil's like, great. He quits his accounting job. He
starts the company. He goes to work. He hires one of his twin younger
sisters who I think was maybe still in high school to help him part-time with receiving
the inventory and sending them out and stuff. The naivete is just dripping off of Phil at
this point. It's like, oh good, I have a business, so surely I will make enough money to be able to
quit my job and hire people. Yes. And now he doesn't have enough money to open a retail outlet or even really to get enough inventory to sell wholesale to other retailers. So his genius business plan, I don't know how much of this was part of the Stanford paper or not, is he's going to drive around to track meets in Oregon and up and down the West Coast and sell the shoes out of his car. Pretty awesome. That's like legitimately doing the shoe leather work
that no one else is willing to do
and getting through that hard part
to get your business off the ground,
establishing proprietary distribution channels.
Yes.
Speaking of proprietary,
he also has another actually really great idea,
which is that while he's driving around, he'll go down to Eugene
and see his old coach, Bowerman, at the University of Oregon. And he thinks, oh, if I could get Bill
to put his runners in Tigers, then that would be great marketing for me. And I know he's not
always super happy with
Adidas. We're going to have a better relationship. He'll be able to experiment with these shoes.
And I'll sell them to him for cheap. Because at this point in time, even the legendary Bill
Bowerman and the University of Oregon, they bought all the shoes. Nobody was giving them
shoes. It was like a major line item in their budget. Crazy. And so let's just take a quick
pause and recognize this company that would eventually become Nike started A, not as Nike,
B, not with a swoosh, C, not making a product. It's literally just importing and reselling
someone else's product. And the plan is to build a big business
off the back of not actually making things.
Not exactly what GSB or any other business school
would determine a recipe for success here.
But maybe that penciled more at the time.
Being in this super globalized world
that we're in now with the internet
and companies with these massive resources
that can scale immediately. And venture capital. Exactly. And venture capital, which can just supercharge a
company's growth if something's working. The idea that your core competency is just distributing
someone else's product among a geographic area where you have a relationship with customers,
that might have actually been a pretty good plan and much more defensible in a way that
it's much harder to build something like that from scratch now. That's a super good point. And it
turned out actually that Onitsuka had already studied the U.S. market, whether they agreed with
Phil's plucked out of thin air market size or not. They wanted to enter the market, but they didn't
think they could do it on their own. So they actually were looking for somebody like Phil. Yep. So Phil goes down to see Bowerman. And to Phil's surprise, I mean,
Bowerman is not a warm and fuzzy guy. He's never really shown Phil much encouragement when he ran
for him or since. Bowerman says, this is a pretty good idea. Not only do I want the shoes for cheap, I want you to cut me in on
the deal. I want to be partners with you in this company. And Phil is like floored.
And like real partners, 50-50-ish. It's not like I want you to like toss me a percent here or there
for being an advisor or something. It's like, okay, great, co-founders, just like that.
So Phil's like, what's the deal
you have in mind? I think originally, Bowerman says 50-50, and then he sleeps on it, and he
comes back with his lawyer, and he says, actually, let's do 51-49. I want you to have 51, me to be
49, because I don't really want to be involved here. Now, on the one hand, this is super
exploitative of Bowerman, of his old athlete that still
obviously looks up to him like a father.
It's kind of like there weren't really VCs yet in this era, but when there would be like
VCs taking 50, 60, 70% of the company.
On the other hand, this is a no-brainer yes for Phil.
Right.
He's giddy about it.
He's like, oh, only half the company?
Great. Well, and if
Phil doesn't do this deal, he would have 100% of Phil Knight's Blue Ribbon Sports. But he does do
the deal and he gets 51% of Bill Bowerman's Blue Ribbon Sports, which is a completely different
animal. Yes. So I was thinking about this. After reading Shoe I was like hmm because I just read it for the second time
it just feels a little weird that Bowerman would just
kind of immediately be like yes
I'll go into business with you person
who ran for me that I never had a particularly close relationship with
and so I've always wondered like why was he so
eager to do this and as part of the, I stumbled upon this guy named Scott Reams, who was formerly
a Nike historian.
He worked in the marketing department and then for over 20 years worked at Nike and
became the company historian.
He has an epic set of LinkedIn posts that are really like these incredible gems pointing
out things in company history.
And so he's got this post.
He says, based on letters in the University of Oregon and Nike archives,
Bill Bowerman corresponded directly with many footwear manufacturers in the 1950s.
So like 15 plus years before this, including Adi Dassler,
directly to Adi Dassler,
trying to purchase shoes for his runners directly to avoid
retail markup. He made it clear he had ideas on how to make running shoes better. Remember,
these are in letters to Adidasler years before. But the responses he received referred him to
footwear distributors in the United States for Adidas and ignored his design offer.
So Bowerman is sitting there and he is primed.
He's like, oh, you're going to import foreign shoes
and give me a deal?
I'm in.
Just like Onitsuka was primed to receive young Phil Knight,
so was Bowerman.
Ben, this is so awesome.
I was going to save this for a reveal later in the episode.
Scott Reams is legendary.
He was, as you say, Nike's corporate historian. He worked
super closely with Phil on writing Shoe Dog. Oh, did you read his post too? I sent you his
LinkedIn. Did you look through them all too? Not only I sent him a message on LinkedIn,
I talked to him. I spent hours talking to Scott. Really? He spent a few days helping me put our
version, Acquired's version of the Nike story together. We have a huge, huge thank you to him.
But I was going to surprise you with this.
This is super cool.
That is so awesome.
Oh, that's so cool.
I guess I should tell you.
So listeners, we talked to like nearly a dozen people
to prepare for this episode.
I also want to thank Eric Sprunk,
who is a 27-year Nike veteran.
And David, you know that I chatted with him,
but he was COO until a couple of years ago
and very cool to get his perspective
and Scott's perspective.
I'm curious if you have any other nuggets
that come up too.
Oh, I've got one in particular
that I want to bring Scott's perspective in,
but it's a little farther in the story.
Great. All right.
So Bowerman.
So, okay, we've got 51 Knight,
49 Bowerman in Blue Ribbon Sports.
They each put in $500 to finance the first big shipment of inventory of tigers from Onitsuka.
And they do, they, meaning Phil, does what he intended to do.
He drives around to track meets around the Pacific Northwest and sells them out over the back of his car.
And even with that funny sales strategy,
and in Shoe Dog, Phil talks about this
while he was in Hawaii with his buddy.
The way they made money was they sold encyclopedias door to door
and then Phil gets a job as a stockbroker trying to sell stocks.
He doesn't make any sales.
He's the most introverted person in the world.
He can't be a salesman.
But for some reason, when he's selling shoes, when he's doing his crazy idea, he can
literally just go to track meets and convince kids and their parents to buy these shoes out of the
back of his car. When you believe in something, sales are just natural. It's so true. So they
sell out basically immediately, and then they plow all the profit that they're making back into the next orders of inventory from Onitsuka. So they do $8,000 in revenue in 1964. That doubles in 1965, they do $16,000 in revenue. But Ben, as I think you're about to say, there's a few problems, one of which is they're not making that much money. It's not
a great gross margin business. You have to pay to import these shoes from Japan. How much can you
really mark them up to sell them? And if you're making, I don't know, two, three bucks profit,
something like that on each pair of shoes, you have to sell a lot of shoes if your only way to
get money to buy more inventory is the profits from the shoes that you sold last order.
I don't even know how you double year over year because where's the money coming from to get the
inventory? This is not a solvable problem. It's a circular issue. There's no way to do it. So,
Phil is selling the Tigers for $6.95 a pair. It costs him and Bowerman about $3.50 to get each pair of shoes. So that leaves what,
about $3.50? Pretty soon, Phil hires his first full-time employee, the legendary Jeff Johnson,
who has a huge role in Nike, as we shall see. Once Jeff and other sales reps come on board,
he's giving them about $1.75 in commissions.
So half the gross margin ends up going into sales and marketing expenses.
Exactly.
So that leaves, what, $1.75, maybe $2, like you said, in profit per pair.
How are you going to order more inventory at $3.50 a pair when you're making $2 in profit per pair?
The math doesn't pencil.
Wow.
Quick aside on Jeff Johnson.
Like we said, he is absolutely legendary.
He also sells out of the back of his car.
He's based in California.
He met Knight at Stanford.
Jeff was a Stanford undergrad who ran track and met Knight while he was at GSB.
Johnson sells out of the back of his car.
He evangelizes the brand.
He designs shoes.
He eventually opens Nike's first retail store in LA.
He sets up manufacturing.
He moves back and forth across the country.
He is basically like everything you would ever want in a first employee at a company.
To find a Jeff Johnson is the most incredible thing that could ever happen to a startup company.
And he has an irrational passion for running, which basically no one else did at the time.
Here's a great quote from Shoe Dog, so it's in Phil Knight's voice.
In 1965, running wasn't even a sport.
It wasn't popular.
It wasn't unpopular. It just was. To go
out for a three-mile run was something weirdos did, presumably to burn off their manic energy.
Running for pleasure, running for exercise, running for endorphins, running to live better and longer,
these were things that were unheard of. People went out of their way to mock runners. Drivers
would slow down and honk their horns. Get a horse, they'd yell, throwing a beer
or soda at the runner's head. And he goes on to say that Johnson had many sodas thrown at his head
while he was out running. This is one of the moments that just floored me, rereading Shoe Dog
and internalizing that, you know, running. I go for a run maybe three times a week these days.
Right. It's just normalized into life.
Every time I walk out in the street, basically anywhere in the world,
unless I'm truly in the middle of nowhere, you see people running.
And the idea that motorists would throw beer and soda cans at runners is crazy.
Yeah, totally wild.
So back to this financing issue. As you can imagine, the only way to grow
as a company with the set of operating constraints that Blue Ribbon Sports has
is through financing. And the only way to get financing in Portland, Oregon in those days
was to go to Oregon regional banks. I think actually there were laws in the U.S. that
corporate banking could not happen across state lines. So there are only like two or three banks
that Knight even has the option of going to. Yep. And by the way, when you're going to get
money from the bank, it's not equity capital. They're not saying like a venture capitalist
would say, oh, I'll buy a piece of your business and value it at this and give you the money at that. It's just pure loan that you owe back to them at some point in time with interest.
Yep. And the bankers who are making these loans in Portland then was a very, very small town in a very, very small state on the west coast of the US. they're not going to be very risk-seeking.
They're going to be quite risk-averse. So there's another good passage that I grabbed from Shoe Dog that explains this. Phil Knight. I was projecting $16,000 in my second
year, and according to my banker, this was a very troubling trend. A 100% increase in sales is
troubling, I asked. Your rate of growth is too fast for your equity, he said.
Growth off your balance sheet is dangerous. And this is where Phil Knight's complete opposite
approach comes in. He goes, life is growth. Business is growth. You grow or you die. And
the banker says, that's not how we see it. And there's a couple important points to make in here,
one of which is this equity they're referring to. We refer to equity these days, especially in startup land, as percentage points in a startup. And what he's
talking about here is the technical definition of equity. The book value of equity. Right. Your
total assets minus your total liabilities is your equity. And in many cases, you can sort of squint
at this if you don't have a lot of liabilities or a lot of debt on your books and say, okay,
so it's basically like the cash in the bank. It's the assets you have on
hand as your equity. So what this banker is basically saying to Phil Knight is, I will only
loan you up to the amount of money that I already know you have. Now, that's not terribly helpful.
It's basically a cash advance. It's like, well, the money that I have is sort of tied up in other
stuff like
inventory, and you're just loaning me enough money for me to make my next order. But there's not
actually any real new capital. It's not like there's a post-money valuation. You're basically
just saying, you can borrow these dollars, then you can give them back to me, and I'm going to
cap your dollar limit super low. Yeah, it's basically factoring. Right. Is what it's known as today. Right.
So yeah, as you can imagine, there are quite a lot of struggles with the various banks in Oregon,
and it's all very well chronicled in Shoe Dog. So since growth is literally rate limited by
the banks, Knight decides that he can't justify taking a salary. He goes back
to being an accountant by day. He joins Pricewaterhouse in the Portland office. He does
that for a couple years. I mean, years, years. It takes a long time to grow this thing. Eventually,
Blue Ribbon does become big enough, and he needs to devote enough time to it that he can't be a
full-time accountant. So instead, he gets a job teaching accounting at Portland State, where he meets two women.
Both of which will change his life.
The first one is a student. Man, things were different in the 60s. A student in his first
class that he teaches named Penny Parks, who he sees has great potential as an accountant. So he hires her as a bookkeeper,
part-time while she's a student, I believe, for Blue Ribbon Sports. Very shortly thereafter,
she becomes Penny Knight, his wife. Now I think of, gosh, like 60 years, maybe? Something like
that. The other woman he meets is an art student, not an accountant, an art student named
Carolyn Davidson. And Phil overhears her talking with some friends in the hallway one day talking
about art classes. And he stops her and he says, hey, I've got a company. We need some part-time
art and design work for like brochures and sponsorship collateral. Because everyone's
telling him that he needs to do advertising. Phil Knight, to this point,
which is hilarious given Nike Today,
doesn't believe in advertising.
And so he's like,
fine, I'll give in to some other people
who are advising me
that I should make some brochures or something.
And the way I'm going to do it
is I'm going to hire a part-time student
from Portland State
to do my advertising collateral
for $2 an hour.
Yes.
She says, sure, put a pin in that.
We are going to come back to Carolyn Davidson
and the Nike art department in a minute here.
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Okay, David.
So should we share the Carolyn Davidson thing now
or don't we need to evolve Nike a little bit more
before it really comes into play?
Yeah, put a pin in it.
We'll come back to it.
So in the meantime, by hook or by crook,
and maybe Onitsuka, as we will see, would argue by crook,
Blue Ribbon Sports'
sales do keep growing. They do keep getting just enough and just enough in time financing to
finance their inventory and orders from Tiger and Onitsuka. In 1966, they do $44,000 in revenue.
In 1967, they do $84,000 in revenue. You're noticing a doubling theme here. Turns out,
even from a very low base, if you double every year for like 20 years, you can still become a
big company. So then, in 1967, Bowerman. Remember, Bowerman's been involved. His name, his association
with the company has been huge throughout all this. But like you were saying a minute ago, Ben, his real motivation is he wants R&D access. He wants to be able to make
shoes. And in 1967, ahead of the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, he comes up with a new idea for an
entirely new type of shoe, one that he probably can't really manufacture on his own,
but now he has this relationship with Tiger, with Onitsuka.
And his idea is that rather than leather
on the upper parts of these track shoes,
what if we instead use a breathable material like nylon
so that my runner's feet aren't sweating
throughout the whole race? On the one hand,
like, yes, nobody likes sweaty feet. On the other hand, if your feet sweat a lot in leather shoes
over the course of several miles, well, they're going to get heavier and weighed down. And so
maybe this might help the shoes stay lighter. And Bowerman is obsessed with lightweight in his
shoes. So Onitsuka is very receptive to this.
They think, great, we love this.
We'll make the shoe.
We can do that.
We can source the nylon.
We'll make the shoe.
So Bowerman and Phil get together.
They're like, this is amazing.
We're going to have our own model,
you know, that we've designed,
that Bowerman's designed.
Which you should already start
to get a little bit nervous here
because it's like, well, okay, who...
Who owns this shoe?
Exactly. Well, that would be for the courts to decide.
Is it like the Blue Ribbon Shoes Design Company owns the design and they hired a contract manufacturer? Or is it more like, oh, we just gave you a little suggestion idea and we BRS don't own anything?
Yep. The relationship complicates a little bit here.
It's no longer just, hey, we're the American distributor
of Tigers. So Bowerman and Phil want to call the shoe, they actually want to borrow from the
Adidas playbook and call the shoe the Aztec ahead of the Mexico City Olympics. Adidas has been doing
this for years. They always come out with new shoe models ahead of whatever the Olympics is in the world every four years. Adidas, of course, has already beaten them to the punch. They have
trademarked a shoe that they're coming out with called the Azteca Gold. And I don't know if it's
Blue Ribbon or Onitsuka decides that the Aztec is too close to that. So legend has it, you know,
knowing these men, I assume this is quite true, Bowerman is casting about for other ideas for names of the shoe, and he says to Knight, what was the name of that Spanish guy that kicked the you-know-what out of the Aztecs?
And Knight is like, oh, that's Cortez.
And thus, the blue ribbon slash tiger Cortez is born.
Naming aside, the nylon uppers are a huge innovation,
and this becomes a big hit.
I bet someone out there is wearing Nike Cortezes right now.
It's become like a lifestyle shoe and less of a running shoe
because the definition of a running shoe has changed dramatically.
And so the fascinating thing
is if you look down at your Nike Cortez or you Google a picture of it, it's basically exactly
the same as the thing that they came out with. But when they came out, it had the Onitsuka,
now Asics, design on it, not the swoosh. Yeah, spoiler alert, Tiger eventually became
Asics. Yes. So also in 1967,
Bowerman has another just monumental contribution.
His contributions, though sporadic when they happen,
are enormous.
Yeah.
So he writes a book.
I feel like some marketing agency these days
would advise a startup on,
oh yeah, this is how you build a market.
You know, write a book, start and evangelize a movement.
Bowerman just does this because it's what he wants to do. He had gone on a trip to visit another
international track coach in New Zealand a few years earlier. And he discovers the concept of
jogging. I don't even know if the word jogging really existed in America at this point in time. The idea of running not to win, but to run for joy
or for physical fitness was an entirely foreign concept. All right, I'm going to read a paragraph
from Shoe Dog here. This is Phil Knight. He told me, on top of everything else, he was also writing
a book. A book, I said, about jogging, he said gruffly. Bowerman was forever griping that people
make the mistake of thinking only elite Olympians are athletes. But everyone's an athlete, he said.
If you have a body, then you're an athlete. Now he was determined to get this point across to a
larger audience, the reading public. Sound interesting, I said, but I thought my old
coach had popped out a screw. Who the heck would want to read a book about jogging?
This is Phil Knight, the founder of Nike.
Right. I mean, even Phil Knight is like, jogging? That's crazy.
So Bowerman writes this book. It's called Jogging, a Physical Fitness Program for All Ages.
He writes the book. It comes out in 1967.
Life Magazine. Life Magazine was huge in America.
Yep. It's the craziest thing.
I keep going back and forth when looking at Nike and say, did they benefit from this enormous wave that they were riding?
Or did they create a wave?
And I think it was actually both.
Yes.
So, Knight has this great quote about this later in life.
He's asked literally this question,
if Nike started the fitness revolution,
and his answer is so typically Phil Knight.
He says, we were at least right there,
and we sure rode it for one hell of a ride.
I love it.
Here's a crazy bit of trivia, David.
So for me, when I reflect back on
like the birth of the jogging movement, because I'm a millennial and I wasn't there, I think of
Forrest Gump. You know, he's running across America and all these people are running with him. And
that time and that aesthetic to me is like, oh, that's when jogging sort of really took off.
He was wearing Nike Cortez's. Yeah. Perfect. So great.
And the fact that Blue Ribbon really did have,
starting to become pretty real distribution at this point
to the West Coast,
they actually had built a brand and a trustworthiness
with customers and coaches
and that sort of thing for themselves
that not only could Bowerman write the book
and evangelize and have the idea,
but they could actually get shoes onto the feet of people because out of this budding company, they actually had a little bit of distribution.
And more than just athletes.
Yeah.
Or more importantly, changing the definition of athlete.
Yes.
I like that.
Changing the definition.
More than just people who define themselves by their occupation, whether amateur or professional, as athletes.
Right.
So by 1970, just a short while after this, Blue Ribbon is now doing over half a million
dollars in annual sales.
So they're like a real company now.
They're selling out of the Corteses literally as fast as they can get them off the boats
from Japan.
Onitsuka renews Blue Ribbon's distribution agreement
in 1970 for three more years to run through 1973.
When this happens, Phil then goes to the bankers in Oregon
and asks for, hey, you know, great.
The Cortez is selling out great.
Fitness is this new thing.
We're a half a million dollar revenue company.
We've got a three-year ironclad deal with our manufacturer. Surely you could assign some value
to that contract, if not to our brand and our team and all these other intangibles. You won't just
treat us as if we're book value now. We'll have some real enterprise value because you can invest
in our enterprise here, our enduring institution. So he asks for a line of credit of $1.2 million to finance inventory.
He never asked for an over-million-dollar line of credit before.
He trips the alarms.
He trips the alarm system.
$1.2 million.
A kid off the street can literally walk down Sand Hill and raise $1.2 million today.
Inflation adjusted, it's probably like $8 million or something.
Sure, whatever.
But a kid off the street can walk out of Stanford
and raise $8 million today.
Exactly, just say it's an AI company.
So the bankers, not literally,
although literally they would do this very shortly thereafter,
they throw him out.
They're like, no, no, no, we're done here.
You can't be doing this, we're done. I'm just fascinated by this concept of,
it's almost as if the idea of enterprise value didn't exist. That literally a company could
only possibly be thought of as its assets minus its liabilities. So what that meant was,
if you want to grow your company and you want to grow it as fast as possible,
then it means you can only take out as much debt as you have assets in the company. But you probably
shouldn't because then if anything goes wrong, your company is like immediately wiped out because
your debt to assets ratio is like literally 100. And what Phil Knight did was all of the time kept
it at a 100% ratio or close to it, like a 90% ratio. He'd look
and see how many assets they had and say, great, we should have exactly that much debt too so I
can grow as fast as possible. And so it kind of becomes this game of musical chairs where when
you're levered that hard, you need to be growing super fast because you need to get that inventory
off the boat, sell it so you can as fast as
possible go and pay off the bank so that A, the interest doesn't pile up and you don't
trip a bunch of covenants, but B, so that then you can go ask them for another loan
to do the same thing again.
And you literally need growth as the only way to keep the lights on.
It's not just growth as a virtue, it's growth as a necessity.
And this, in addition to the competitive thing I mentioned earlier, where Nike is a competitive company, Nike is a growth company. And if you go to their investor relations page to this day,
across the top, in big bold letters, it says, Nike Inc. is a growth company. They were born out of this is the only possible way to continue our existence is grow so we can decry the ridiculousness of startups and VC and tech and
all that now, but this is a way better alternative than the way things used to be. Two, though,
ironically, I actually, as crazy as this sounds, think it was a critical element of Nike succeeding
and becoming Nike. Because if it were too easy, there would have been a flood of
other competitors. Or Onitsuka and others would have just done this themselves. Right. It's like
many of the stories we tell that it's path dependent. The only way to have built what
they built was to have endured what they endured in a system that was stacked against them.
Yes. And there's huge survivorship bias here. Yep.
But the journey that they had to go through
to survive is incredible.
Plenty of other companies maxed out
their available credit and debt all the time
and had a 100% liabilities to assets ratio
and went out of business.
And went under, yes.
And Nike almost does.
So when this happens,
when he gets thrown out of the banks,
Phil needs to do something to raise money.
So he decides the only thing he can think of is to do a small public offering,
like a local IPO.
Remember how Ben & Jerry's was the first...
Direct listing?
Yeah, I think it's something like that,
where Ben & Jerry's sold shares in Vermont to their neighbors.
This is what Phil wants to do.
And this is how bad it is.
So A, he changes the name of the company.
This is so good.
Nike isn't anywhere in the picture yet.
He changes the name of the company to Sports-Tech, T-E-K, Inc.
With the idea that, oh, this will make us sound like a technology company,
and then people will be interested in investing.
Because he hears that people are getting financing for their business in the form of equity capital,
where they're willing to assign a valuation to the company. And regardless of what your current
sales and assets look like, that sort of takes your potential future growth into account and
gives you capital in exchange for that. And what they want is a percent of the upside,
you know, equity investing as we know it today in startups. And all of that is happening in Northern California into tech
companies as we chronicled on the Sequoia episode with Don Valentine. It's that era.
Exactly. We are right in that era now. Don is about to start Sequoia. A lot of this is happening
around Stanford. Of course, Phil up in Oregon is hearing about this. But once anybody, you know,
any proto-venture capitalist digs into sports tech, they're going to be like, no.
So what I've never been able to figure out is, did he change it to Sports Tech Inc. and then
change it back to Blue Ribbon Sports? Or did they sort of like, I'm trying to figure out if they
ever literally changed the name on documents. Oh, that's a great question for Scout Reams.
We'll have to ask him. Yeah, yeah. So this is how bad it is, though. The offering fails. Nobody's interested. None of these proto-VCs,
none of the local business people in Portland, they're all like, oh, no, no. This is a terrible
company. Well, and Phil Knight undersells it, too. Before he learns some of his later lessons,
it's his super humble, you know, I'm not a very good runner. I'm only a 413 miler
type attitude. Right. Aw, shucks. Yeah. And so that's not going to sell shares in your company.
Yep. So he ultimately has to raise some money from the families of some of the employees at
Blue Ribbon, most famously Bob Waddell, who would become Nike's first president other than Phil when Phil takes a
sabbatical later in the 80s. Bob has this amazing story. He was also a Bowerman runner, had a
terrible accident in college and was confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life, becomes one
of Nike's and Blue Ribbon's first employees, and then becomes a huge leader, builds so many things
at the company and becomes the first
president other than Phil. But he doesn't come from wealth and his family loans, I think,
$3,000 or $5,000 to Blue Ribbon, like a huge amount of money for them.
It's like a huge amount of the family's net worth.
Phil would convert that into equity before the actual IPO,
and they would become millionaires and change their lives.
It's amazing. Yeah, the way that he was financing this was basically through convertible debt.
And so all the pre-IPO little friends and family financings that he's doing here are convertible notes.
So this brings us to 1971.
The Annis, either Mirabellus or Haribla, depending on how you want to think about it i just butchered
both latin and french there but clearly this financing path isn't gonna work for the next
stage of growth eventually knight i think he reads in either a magazine or a newspaper article
about japanese trading companies how he had never heard of Japanese trading companies before then,
given the amount of business he was doing in Japan, is crazy.
Although it was in Onitsuka's strong interest for Phil and Blue Ribbon
not to find out about Japanese trading companies, as we shall see.
And what they are is this very strange type of company
that we don't really have, at least in the tech ecosystem today.
No, does not exist in America or in most countries.
And it's sort of a hybrid between a lender and a supply chain partner, where it's a company that has some primary business that they're doing.
Slash private equity firm slash holding company. where it's a company that has some primary business that they're doing.
Slash private equity firm slash holding company.
Yes.
It's a company that, in this particular instance,
has a business that they're in and generates a bunch of cash.
So what do you do with the company's treasury?
Well, you could do boring stuff with it, or you could make strategic investments with it,
or you could operate a financing business
where you leverage all of the unique
relationships you have from the parent company to do diligence, to advantage your investments,
to put your foot on the scale, and you're using the fact that you have a large treasury to
open a competitively advantaged bank, especially in sourcing international goods. Yes, to do asset
based financing, exactly what Blue Ribbon needs. So the company that he ends up meeting at the
local branch office of it in Portland, I think they might have been the only Japanese trading
company with a branch office in Portland, is Nisho Iwai, which is one of the smaller ones.
Today, the company is called Sojitz. Today, it is still a $40 billion revenue company.
Back then in 1971, it was a $100 billion annual revenue company. And it was, I think, the sixth
largest Japanese trading company. The other ones that many listeners probably will have heard of are companies like Mitsubishi
or Mitsui or Sumitomo.
These are enormous companies.
And especially in the 70s, as Japan was really rising, we told the story on the Sony episode,
Nishio Iwai was a godsend for Blue Ribbon.
And it could have gone either way.
That was the thing with these Japanese trading companies,
is if you weren't super clear on exactly what you wanted up front,
it could totally go the way of private equity,
where, oh, you tripped one covenant,
or, oh, you this, that, the other thing, and suddenly they're able to own a controlling interest of your company,
or they're able to take over management and install their own people. It was a PE-style
financing where oftentimes they would sort of take over and absorb the businesses that they
were financing. So Phil Knight was going into this saying, okay, that really, really, really
can't happen to Blue Ribbon. What can I possibly negotiate with these guys to make it so that their interests
are aligned with mine, but not in a way that could compromise my control?
Right, because he gets a little spooked. According to Shoe Dog, Phil walks into the
office of Nisho Iwai in Portland. This is like the Portland, Oregon branch office of Nisho Iwai.
Meets with one of the officers there who would go on to become an incredible
personal relationship for Nike and for Phil, a guy named Tom Sumeragi. And he offers on the spot
to finance all of Nike's inventory on the spot in a meeting in the branch office in Portland.
So Phil's like, whoa, how do I deal with these guys?
Right. They're a little too eager. This can't be that good of a deal, what's going on here. It turns out, ultimately,
it's a great deal. And why is it a great deal? Well, the first thing you have to know is Nisho
knows Japanese manufacturers. And so they start asking Phil Knight questions like, well, who do
you work with in Japan? And like, would you ever make your own shoes? And are you looking for
relationships with more factories? And so they start to get the sense that like, maybe eventually
we could put our foot on the scale in certain ways and help this company win. And so if we're
doing business with them as their financing partner, this could be really good for us too.
So Phil, in retrospect, makes the mistake of calling up Onitsuka and saying, hey, you know, I'm in this lurch with financing. I just met Nisho Iwai. They offered to finance all my orders with you guys. Would you be okay if I do it? And they immediately say, absolutely not. And the reason they say absolutely not is, Ben, just like you're saying, they know what's going to happen here is Nisho is going to say to Phil, hey, this is nice that you're buying Onitsuka's inventory. Onitsuka, I think, is like a 20, 30, maybe $40 million revenue company in Kobe at this point in time.
Right. This could creep into us. Nisho is a $100 billion company, right?
Nisho is going to say,
hey, we'll introduce you to manufacturers,
to factories here in Japan.
Build your own shoes.
Make your own brand.
Screw these tiger guys.
And that is exactly what happens.
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to Huntress. Okay, so Blue Ribbon's in this interesting situation where they've been kicked
out of their bank from a lending perspective. They can still keep their money there, they still have
the operating accounts, but they can't get any more debt there to finance their inventory, which they need to buy. You know, they need this cash to be able to buy their next
round to grow the company. Nisho enters the picture. How does it go from here? So this basically
sets off a whole chain of events that would later get prosecuted in court. So Onitsuka, as we said,
they are super nervous. They know what this Nisho relationship is going
to mean for Blue Ribbon, and it's not good for them. So they start looking around at working
with other potential distributors in the U.S. They assume that Blue Ribbon, one way or another,
is going to end their relationship with them here. They also, as kind of a last-ditch effort, make an offer to buy Phil out, to buy Blue
Ribbon. And Phil thinks he's being smart here. He stalls. He doesn't say yes, he doesn't say no.
He's like, oh, let me talk to Bowerman. Yes. And one thing I was trying to figure out, so in
Shoe Dog, it doesn't give a value. Phil just says that his contact at Onitsuka offers to buy 51% of Blue Ribbon and keep
him as a minority partner.
And from some other sources, what Phil Knight says in interviews is that they offered to
buy it for book value.
Yes, that's what I read too, which I imagine is like zero. So it's a pretty terrible
deal because what is the book value of a company that 100% of the time has its capital tied up in
inventory? Right, it's zero. So it's zero million in revenue, which best estimates would be that their cost was something like $600,000, $700,000.
Right. But they probably turned that inventory several times. So at any given point in time, the inventory is less than that. Right. So it's a terrible deal. It's a takeover. And so
Phil Knight's basically just like, I don't want to piss them off by declining, so I'll just say
nothing. Right. He knows at this point that he's done with Onitsuka. They're going to go with Nisho
and they're going to set up their own factory relationships and make their own shoes. But he
can't just shut off Tiger.
It's going to take time to spin this stuff up.
He needs the Tiger shoes in the interim.
So he stalls.
And by the way, this relationship so far has been unbelievably fruitful.
They're at the point now where because of Blue Ribbon,
70% of runners in the U.S.
Mind you, runners is not a large category yet,
but runners in the U.S. have Onitsuka shoes.
Yeah.
So this is pretty important.
Yeah.
So there's a whole bunch of stuff.
Phil hires a spy.
There's a thing
where the Onitsuka management team
comes over
to visit Blue Ribbon headquarters.
Phil steals some documents
out of the guy's briefcase.
Literally, the guy gets up
to go to the bathroom or something
and Phil grabs it out of a folder and photocopies it. Yeah, it's pretty bad. Even worse,
Phil's a combination, as we keep saying, of Genghis Khan and like extremely introverted and really
naive. He writes a memo to the whole company saying that he's hired a spy at Onitsuka.
This is not the kind of stuff that you want coming up in Legal Discovery later.
A whole bunch of this stuff happens.
They end up in this literal Mexican standoff here where like,
there's no way out without firing shots.
And somebody has to fire a shot first.
And it's Phil.
Phil shoots first.
He's like, Han, he shoots first.
And I say Mexican standoff too, because A, that is the situation they're in.
B, the first shot gets fired in Mexico.
So while Phil is waiting on spinning up the Japanese factory relationships with Nisho Iwai,
he remembers from back in the Mexico City Olympics in 1968, I think, that there was a factory, I believe in Guadalajara,
that Adidas had used to make soccer cleats for the Olympics.
And he says, you know, those soccer cleats that Adidas made were pretty good.
Let me go down to that factory and see if I can get some of those cleats
and we'll sell them here in America as blue ribbon American football cleats.
Now, technically, he thinks this won't violate his exclusivity agreement with Onitsuka because
Onitsuka doesn't make football cleats. Now, that's debatable. Yeah. There's a paragraph
in the written agreement that gives Phil Knight three years or whatever it is of exclusive distribution. In exchange, he is forbidden from importing other brands of track and field shoes. And so theoretically, he thinks as long as they're like, yeah, sure. What do you want to put on them? When we made them for Adidas, you know, we had the three stripes on them, the Adidas stripes.
What design do you want on your version of these shoes? And oh yeah, by the way,
what do you want to call them? And Phil's like, um, let me get back to you on both of those.
So he goes home to Portland and calls up who else? Carolyn Davidson.
Yep. The part-time art department at Blue Ribbon Sports
for $2 an hour.
And he asks her to design something like Adidas' stripes
that can go on the sides of these soccer-slash-football cleats.
And huge thank you here to Scott Reams
for helping us sort out exactly what the timeline is
and what the details are,
because it's not
well understood how this all went down.
And you can actually
hear quotes from Phil Knight
in interviews and a little bit in Shoe Dog
where it disputes
other records of how this all
went down. And people care a lot about this, because
obviously what we're getting here is
the origin of the swoosh and of Nike.
And so how does this end up happening?
The most interesting thing is from Scott, he put this on LinkedIn, he talked to Carolyn
herself about this.
Her recollection is that originally in the request to create what became the swoosh,
they wanted structural support as an element in the design.
And she came back with some designs.
They didn't like any of them.
And so in the second revision,
they dropped the requirement that it be supportive in any way
and that it's just about having the brand sewn onto the outside.
Also, super importantly,
this is not the name that we're talking about here.
So point one, we're just talking about a logo
to go on the shoes.
So all the thought of like,
oh, the swoosh is like the wing of the goddess of victory.
No, not the case.
This is before the name.
Right, so it's literally not inspired
by the Greek goddess of victory.
Like I was just in France.
I just stood in front of the winged victory statue.
It's this beautiful, incredible thing in Paris.
There's this myth running around forever and ever
that the swoosh is inspired by one of those wings.
The name Nike came after the design of the swoosh,
which, by the way, also was not called a swoosh yet.
Okay, so as you say, she goes through two rounds of sketches.
When the second round comes back, they're out of time.
The factory is calling and they're like, hey, shoes are just about ready.
We just got to put the sides on them.
What do you want?
So finally, Phil and Jeff Johnson and Bob Waddell, they're sitting around and a couple other folks.
And they're like, well, we got to pick one.
And they're like, well, maybe, I don't know, this one that kind of looks like a checkmark. It maybe is the best of the bunch. And Phil very
famously says the line, I don't love it, but maybe it'll grow on me. And that becomes the swoosh.
Now, ultimately, they do give Carolyn stock in the company before the IPO. So she makes more than
$2 an hour. But for this
project, she was paid $35. Which also, she said she spent way more than 17 and a half hours,
but it was just kind of coming up with some price to charge. Fun thing about, I did the math on the
IPO shares. When Nike went public, they did give her 500 shares. The stock price today is around $110, and it has split seven times. So two to the seventh
times $110 a share times her 500 shares is worth $7 million today. Nice. And I heard Phil say
somewhere, I think it might have been in the GSB graduation speech, I believe he said that she held
the shares. Yes. As late as 2016, 2017, he is on the record
saying she has never sold a share. Yeah. Wow. Incredible. Pretty cool. So they send the logo
off. So a short while later, Factory in Mexico calls them up and is like, all right, shoes are
done. We're ready to box them and ship them. What should the model name of these shoes be?
Like the Cortez or the Azteca Gold or whatever they had called them. What's the model name of
the shoes? And so back at Nike headquarters, they're all sitting around brainstorming.
And this is where all the famous ideas that get thrown out, Phil Knight loves Dimension Six,
the other people are throwing out the Bengal, the Falcon,
you know, all the naming ideas.
The idea is they want to name the model of the shoes,
like these cleats.
What are the cleats called?
They're not coming up with a name for the company.
And it's the idea it's going to be the blue ribbon Dimension Sixes.
Yes.
So legend has it,
and as best as we can tell,
this is actually true.
In typical Phil Knight style,
he can't make a decision.
They're waiting towards the end.
It's the same story
as happened with the logo
all over again.
They're batting it around.
And then the night before
they need to finally drop dead,
give the name of the shoes
to the factory.
Jeff Johnson comes in and is like, I had a dream last night.
Johnson.
And in the dream, the name came to me, Nike.
And everybody's like, what are you talking about?
What are you talking about?
And he's like, the winged Greek goddess of victory.
These are going to be the Nike football cleats.
And everybody's like, all right, well, we like that better than the other stuff.
Ship it.
But it wasn't that big a deal.
Like, it was a big deal, but it wasn't that big a deal.
This wasn't intended to be Nike.
This was intended to be the name of the model of the football cleat.
That they weren't even sure was going to work.
Right. And it didn't work.
Turns out this factory, not very high quality.
Well, no, I don't think that was the problem. I think the factory was fine. I mean,
they made shoes for Adidas for the Olympics. The problem was it was in Guadalajara.
It doesn't get very cold in Guadalajara. So the shoes were great, but in freezing
temperatures, they would crack.
They'd never been tested in the cold.
And, you know, as Americans at least know,
many American football games are played in cold temperatures.
So they ordered 3,000 pairs.
They sold them.
Apparently, the Notre Dame football team wore them that year,
or at least the quarterback did.
Then they would crack in cold weather.
So it was a very inauspicious start to Nike and the swoosh here.
Yeah, it's kind of amazing
that they even continued after that
or that they didn't just give up and say,
okay, shoe distribution sounds a lot better
than making shoes.
Yes, but again, whether it violated the letter
of the agreement with Onitsuka or not,
ultimately the courts would decide it didn't,
but it's game over here.
Like the relationship is done. They have burned the would decide it didn't. But it's game over here. The relationship
is done. They have burned the bridge. It's over. Yeah. And this, to me, is a little bit of a thing
in Nike's DNA where they are competitive all the way up to the line and then one toe over.
Yeah. What's the uber corporate value toe-stepping from the Travis era?
It's very much that. We are fiercely competitive. And at this point in time,
it was to stay alive, so I get it. But for their whole existence, it's like,
is there anything we can do that other people aren't doing because they kind of think you can't,
but maybe we'll do it anyway and deal with the repercussions?
That kind of happens with Nike over and over and over again.
And for most of these situations, this one very
much included, yeah, like this ends up in lawsuits and yeah, it's probably a toe over the line.
On the other hand, it's also a little bit like Uber in the early days with toe stepping. Like
the alternative was the taxi industry. It's good for the world that they stepped a toe over the line. Like, they didn't do this. There's no Nike.
Yep.
So with that, Onitsuka pulls out of the relationship.
They don't send any more tigers to Blue Ribbon.
Phil signs a deal, finally, with Nisho Iwai.
And the core part of the deal is Nisho will, A, finance all of Blue Ribbon's financing needs, henceforth, pretty much at a
scale that goes all the way up to the moon. I mean, they're a $100 billion revenue company,
certainly way more than any of the Oregon banks could do. And they'll do that at market interest
rates. Two, Nisho will help Blue Ribbon set up direct manufacturing relationships in Japan, which they do.
And then three, in exchange for all that, Nisho gets a 4% royalty on every shoe that Blue Ribbon sells,
which ultimately ends up being a great relationship.
And that's on top of the financing.
So they already owe interest on borrowing the money, but now they additionally owe a 4% royalty. Yes, this is sort of like the trading company playbook. And is that just for
the inventory they finance or all sales? I believe it's for all sales. Whoa, does that still exist?
I don't know. I doubt if it does in the same way. I know that the relationship with Nisho Iwai continued for like 30, 40 years, like a very long
time. If it still does exist today, I'm sure it is not the same terms. But this goes on for a very
long period of time. Wow. I mean, at this point in history, to have the house in order with a
strong financing partner, there's crazy stuff we didn't even cover. Like he got kicked out of
multiple banks. The FBI got involved. They were playing it a little bit too fast and loose where they were
using every available penny to buy inventory. And so there'd be checks that bounced for payroll and
things like that. When these things topple, they topple all at once. And so they had a day where
they got called into the bank and then the bank called
the FBI and then they got investigated for fraud. It was an insane few years there.
Yeah. Shoe Dog has a lot of great like Phil Knight's personal experience going through this,
which is, I mean, it's worth the read no matter what, but read it for that.
But safe to say this moment here in, what is it, 1971?
71, 72.
They can kind of take a deep breath and say,
well, the business ahead is still really hard
because now Onitsuka is going to be working against us.
We have to figure out how to design and make shoes ourselves.
But at least we have a real financing partner
that has struck a deal to work with us.
Yep.
So once this is all in place, Phil goes over to Japan
and works with Nisho,
goes, visits lots of factories,
ends up meeting the Nippon Rubber Factory.
He's touring with lots of folks
and his sort of test of these factories
of whether they can be a good partner
is he pulls out a Cortez
and he asks the factory
how long it would take them
to make a version of this shoe.
So he meets with Nippon River in the morning.
They say, let's go out to lunch.
Let us borrow the shoe, inspect it a little bit.
We'll come back after lunch and we'll have an answer for you.
They come back after lunch
and there is an almost perfect duplicate of the Cortez
sitting there on the conference room
table. And Phil's like, hell yeah. This is what I'm talking about. What an amazing way to do
business. Because he had met with all these other factories. They were like, yeah, we'll get back to
you in a few weeks. And like over lunch, they built one. Amazing. So he is jazzed. He orders all sorts of models.
He's like, can you do all the running shoes that we slash Tiger were doing before?
At least the ones that we and Bowerman designed.
They're like, yep, no problem.
He's like, can you do tennis shoes, basketball shoes, cleats?
He's like, yep, yep, yep.
Whatever you want.
So in a kind of very unfilled night-like peak of confidence here, he says,
great, well, I'll just start writing out model names. So he writes out the Wimbledon tennis
shoe, the Forest Hill tennis shoe, the Blazer basketball shoe, the Bruin basketball shoe,
the Marathon, of course, the Cortez. He's like, great, let's do all of them.
And these are Nike franchises that stood the test of time.
Many of these shoes are still made.
The Blazer for sure.
Yep, of course, the Cortez.
And they're like, okay, great.
And then Phil's like, one more thing.
The boxes.
Can you make them bright orange?
I want them to stand out.
And Nipon Rubber's like, you got it, man.
Whatever you want.
It's awesome.
So great. And to thison Rubber's like, you got it, man. Whatever you want. It's awesome. So great.
And to this day, they're orange.
And by the end of this trip, Phil and Blue Ribbon Sports has a whole new line of athletic
shoe models coming out of Japan with a much better relationship, solid financing, and
a brand new brand to show it all off, the winged goddess of victory, Nike.
Yep.
And there's kind of this funny thing where it is still Blue Ribbon Sports.
So in 1971, they do create Nike Inc.
It is a wholly owned subsidiary of Blue Ribbon Sports, and it is responsible for manufacturing,
well, or contracting with manufacturers to make this line
of shoes, this Nike-designed line of shoes owned by Blue Ribbon Sports. Of course, later on,
these would flip and Nike would become the parent company. But for now, it's a subsidiary of Blue
Ribbon. Amazing. So, Phil gets home and he tells Bowerman about this. And this is where yet another sporadic but incredible Bowerman
stroke of genius comes to play for Blue Ribbon slash Nike. Bowerman's jazzed. He's like, great,
I never liked the Onitsuka guys that much anyway. But he doesn't really care about that. What he
cares about is he's like, wait, so there are factories now? We can tell them exactly what to do? You mean I'm the new chief R&D officer of Blue Ribbon Sports?
Let's get to work.
So that weekend, supposedly it was the weekend right after Knight told Bowerman about what was happening.
He goes home and over breakfast on Sunday, Bill is sitting there.
His wife, Barbara, is making waffles for breakfast. And
honest to God, I think, you know, I mean, according to Scott, according to everybody,
this really happened. Bill is struck with inspiration. And he's like, hey, honey,
can I borrow that waffle iron? Borrow. That waffle iron was not coming back. He goes out
in the back in his mountain home. And he had a vat of polyurethane
sitting there. And he had it because the University of Oregon had just redone their track and made it
into a polyurethane track instead of a cinder track. And Bowerman at the time was like, well,
this is great. This is the future. The Olympics are going to do this and whatnot. But the shoes that I have, that I have my runners in,
they're not gripping the track that well.
And so he sees the waffle iron and he's like,
what if I pour polyurethane into the waffle iron?
Which has two problems.
Yes, the shape is, yeah,
you can imagine how that could grip a track well.
There's two problems.
One, hot polyurethane, super toxic.
The man, for many years of his life, because he's been experimenting forever, is like
breathing in all these hot, terrible chemicals. He's literally a mad scientist. Yes. And two,
pouring hot polyurethane into a waffle iron is going to permanently glue the iron shut.
Yes, which is exactly what happens. So apparently, the first actual waffle trainer shoe
was inspired by this design,
but he literally couldn't make one
in a traditional waffle iron.
Now, according to Scott,
you cannot make this stuff up.
Everybody thought that that original waffle iron
was lost to history,
and was this even true or apocryphal anyway?
Years and years later, after Bill had died,
his, I think it was his kids, are going through the estate.
No.
And out back is up in the mountains.
Like they didn't have real trash service.
So they threw the trash in like a garbage pile in the back
and they're doing some renovations to the house or something.
Somehow, they discover out in the trash heap the glued shut waffle iron,
and it is in Nike's possession to this day.
That is awesome.
Isn't that awesome?
So where, of course, this is leading
is the waffle trainer,
which is another one of Bowerman's
genius inventions and becomes the first
big hit shoe for the new Nike brand. He would eventually, after gluing the first waffle iron
shut, then create a mold out of plaster in the waffle iron, pour polyurethane into that,
and then make the waffle soles for the shoes. They work incredibly well on artificial surfaces,
not just tracks, but also AstroTurf, which is becoming a thing at this point in time.
So the University of Oregon football team wears them that year on their new AstroTurf field.
It's like a huge thing. They beat Oregon State wearing their waffle trainers. This is
incredible publicity for Nike.
And I think the waffle trainer is starting to be worn outside of track situations. Like,
this is the first hint of a lifestyle sneaker.
Yes. I forget what the first colorway that they do it in is.
Look at you, sneakerhead over there. Colorway.
Colorway. Eventually, I think it's Phil who's like,
oh, we should do this in a blue that'll go well with blue jeans.
Yeah.
The canonical old school waffle trainer
is blue with a yellow swoosh.
And I think a lot of those were sold to be lifestyle shoes
going with blue jeans.
Which turns into Nike's real business eventually.
But that, the success on the field, on AstroTurf fields, the success in track,
that year, so this is 1972, Blue Ribbon's first full year doing sales as Nike purely on their own,
they do $3.2 million in revenue.
Remember, just a couple of years before their last kind of full year with Tiger,
they were doing half a million dollars in revenue.
So to go from all the crazy drama,
ending the Tiger relationship,
starting up their own factory production,
making the Waffle Trainer to be at $3.2 million,
fully financed by Nisho,
what a great spot to be in.
Nike is designing their own shoes and going direct to the manufacturer.
I think the benefit to the business at this point is not margin expansion. It's purely aliveness.
And can we convince people to buy things from us that aren't Onitsuka Tigers? Because to this point,
it's still unproven if it's, hey, Blue Ribbon has great distribution and people will buy anything
from these guys because we trust the company,
or if it's people really wanted Onitsuka Tiger
because they were really good shoes for runners
and I don't really want whatever this new thing you're selling is.
Yes.
And it turned out that it was the former.
People were willing, definitely willing,
to buy Blue Ribbon shoes
and to buy Bill Bowerman shoes
regardless of Tiger and Onitsuka.
Which is kind of amazing.
That is completely opposite to what my intuition would have suggested.
I would have definitely believed there's these shoes
that are popular among other competitors,
so I should be wearing them to be as competitive as them.
If I run in them myself, I learn to like them.
It's very strange that it ends up being the relationship that matters. Like thinking,
oh, I trust whatever this running shoe distribution company is now making because they say it's good.
I'm sure it's good. Well, this is how important Bowerman was. He started jogging. Not only was
he Bill Bowerman, you know, legendary track coach,
he also started jogging. So the convergence of things, all the butterfly wing flapping that had
to happen for Nike to become Nike, right at this time, right as Nike is being born and Blue Ribbon is going out on their own. Bowerman gets a generational runner
at Oregon. Steve Prefontaine, tragedy. Like, weirdly, so many people we've covered recently
on Acquired dies in a car crash way too young, you know, James Dean style, which ironically, of course, just cements his legacy. But Pree was the American
runner. He was on the cover of Sports Illustrated while he was a runner at Oregon for Bowerman.
He simultaneously held every American record for every distance between 2,000 and 10,000 meters.
It's crazy. He died holding every single one of those
records. Yes, incredible. And he did this at Oregon and then later as a professional, but still for
Bowerman and his Olympic teams in Nikes right as Nike was starting. You can't script this any
better. And in fact, he was not allowed to take a paid endorsement due to AAU rules.
Yes, this is another toe-stepping that's going to happen here.
Just like snatching the document out of the briefcase, whatever it takes to win,
Phil Knight figures out a way to A, make sure that he's running in Nikes, and B, make sure that he
doesn't need to worry about money by finding a clever way to not do a paid endorsement,
but something else.
And this is one of those things that the AAU
and the amateur rules and all that,
Nike was 1,000% on the side of right here.
And Nike was on the side of the athlete,
which is a thing that they've always been
and is a huge part of their strategy.
Yes.
So what was happening was amateur athletic
rules and the Olympic organizing committee's rules were that you had to be an amateur. You
couldn't be a professional athlete. You couldn't take endorsements or take money to race. Pree was
this poor kid from Oregon. So after he graduated and wasn't at the university anymore, he literally had to bartend to make money
while he's simultaneously holding the American records
in every major distance event.
This is criminal.
So what Phil does is he decides to employ Pri
as a corporate employee of Nike
as the national director of public affairs
for $5,000 a year.
With no responsibility.
Yes. And there's this amazing quote in Shoe Dog. Phil says,
people asked me what that meant. I said, it means he can run fast.
So great.
So great. This is the perfect encapsulation. I'm going to foreshadow just a little bit here of the later number three
in the later Nike document of the 10 principles of Nike that we will talk about in a bit.
Number three is so great. Perfect results count, not a perfect process. Break the rules,
fight the law. That's exactly what Phil and Nike are doing here.
Yep, you bet. So that's on the sort
of proto-marketing front that this early Nike playbook is getting going. You know, $5,000 for
the best publicity you could possibly ever get. It's Phil basically inventing sports marketing.
I mean, there was a sort of nascent idea of athlete sponsorship at the time, but it really,
this is the invention of it as we know it today.
And all athletic brands are defined by athletes, and this is really the first instance.
Yes, that's part one of just the brilliant kind of restart up of the Nike startup playbook that Phil puts together here.
Part two, equally brilliant and innovative. He comes up with an idea for what he calls the
futures program. So the way retailing worked back then, and Nike had their own stores always,
but they also sold through retailers, of course. The retailers would place orders with Nike to buy
the shoes and then they would resell them at retail.
And then they would pay after they got the inventory.
This is how retail works.
This is like the law of the land.
Not the official law, but the way it all works.
Phil comes up with the idea,
because remember, he's got the Nisho-UI partnership,
but financing is still, like, he's scarred by this.
So he goes to the retailers and says, if you commit and pay
for your orders six months in advance, Blue Ribbon will give you a 7% discount. And we're
going to call this the Nike Futures Program. So he's essentially moving his financing from
banks and Nisho Iwai over to his retail partners, to his customers.
And the retailers, of course, tell him to take a hike at first.
But then the waffle trainer comes out and they can't make enough of them.
And retailers can't get enough of them.
And the only way that they can get the waffle trainer, sweet, sweet inventory, those delicious waffles that they want, is to sign up for the
Futures program. And this really starts Nike down a path of their distribution strategy being a
wholesaler. They sell to retail chains. And for decades, starting here in the early 70s,
they are predominantly someone who reaches their customers
through an intermediary, through retail.
Yes. So that's the second piece.
The third piece then is sort of obvious and has happened all along,
but now as Nike is making their own shoes,
is outsourcing and global outsourcing of manufacturing.
So again, Nike isn't making the shoes in their own factories.
Now, they did actually buy a shoes in their own factories. Now, they did
actually buy a factory in New Hampshire along the way, which is a little bit of a detour.
Phil sent Jeff Johnson out to buy it and run it. That was more of a stopgap measure while they were
transitioning from Tiger. Kind of a hedge, too. It was a hedge, yes. And it was a secret hedge.
Again, break the rules, fight the law. They used Nisho's money, which was supposed to be to buy inventory, instead to plow it into CapEx of buying and rehabbing a factory. And then they were secretly operating their own factory with money that was not supposed to be used for that purpose. But again, Nike, break the rules, fight the law. And here they are today, a huge and successful company. I like that. Break the rules, fight the law sounds much more inspiring than toe-stepping.
So global outsourcing, though.
At first, this, of course, is in Japan with Nippon Rubber.
But as we were saying, Japan is coming up in the global economy.
And right around this time, Nixon cuts the dollar peg to the yen loose,
and the yen starts floating against the dollar.
So up until this point, from after World starts floating against the dollar. So up until
this point, from after World War II until the mid-70s, the yen was pegged to the dollar.
Once the currency floats, and the Japanese economy, of course, has come up hugely over
these decades, now currency issues become a big problem for Nike in terms of importing from Japan,
and the cost of labor is going up so basically the
writing's on the wall there's no way that they're getting shoes for three dollars a pair anymore
anytime soon this means that they gotta go find other countries to make the shoes and
yep so phil and a bunch of the management team starts flying around asia they go to taiwan they
go to south korea ultimately they go to china they they go to Indonesia, they go to Vietnam. And this is where the Nike global production machine is born. And at first, it's primarily Taiwan and then South Korea that they go to. Then the big move is into China, both in terms of production and for selling. I think there's a scene in Shoe Dog, even when he's on the trip around the world in
1963, that he like peers into China from Hong Kong and is dreaming about 2 billion feet in China.
Nike would be one of the very first companies, and I think the first footwear company that would
be allowed to sell in China. To sell and open factories. They sort of opened the country for
the industry. So this, we would certainly be
remiss in doing a Nike episode if we didn't talk about the downside of this. The upside, of course,
is cheap shoes. And the upside, I think you can make a strong argument in the case with many of
those countries that this is part of the coming up process in the global economy.
If you look at what happened to the Japanese economy,
to the South Korean economy, to the Taiwanese economy,
they went from making shoes to making chips
to making technology to being global economic powers.
It's part of the process.
At the same time, people are making like 70 cents a day
working in these factories.
Totally. Well, let's flash forward to the 90s here where this really hits a flashpoint. And
then I think we'll come back to the story. While we're here, we may as well be here.
So stories hit the news of some really horrible things like child labor,
stitching soccer balls on dirt floors in high temperatures, toxic glues.
Carcinogens.
Et cetera. Nike fans looked at this as, on dirt floors and high temperatures, toxic glues, carcinogens, etc.
Nike fans looked at this as,
oof, the company really has a black mark on their otherwise great reputation.
But it kind of was the natural endpoint of an idea
that had been in the company's DNA the whole time.
I mean, literally, Phil Knight's Stanford paper
is about arbitraging cheap labor from imported goods
and selling into markets willing to pay higher prices.
They should have realized this is where it could have gone if left unchecked.
So to add insult to injury, Nike wildly mishandled this. They tried to act like it wasn't their
problem. They literally said to the press, oh, we don't make shoes. Mark Parker later walked this
back with a stance where he said, ignorance is not bliss. You have to understand the systemic issues and work with factory partners to solve them. They did do a huge amount of work to clean up their act.
They created new standards for factory partners. They published supplier lists.
They have third-party audits of factories. They do huge investments in R&D and invented things
like new types of glue that weren't toxic, which they then went on to share with their competitors.
But David, I don't know, there is still this interesting and more theoretical question.
What is the line of acceptability and who should determine it? Obviously, when a company trips a
clear, bright line like child labor, there is appropriately public outcry. But what about when
the lines are blurrier? Are 75-degree factories okay? Or are $3 wages fine if the local average
is $2 an hour? At the end of
the day, there's a discomfort of sitting with the idea that in order to manufacture a product that
you are buying from shoes to smartphones, somebody has to work in conditions you wouldn't endure,
even if it's better than all of their other options. And companies need to grapple with
a spectrum that they sit on. On one end, there's making the absolute maximum margin. And on the other end, there's creating labor conditions that customers would totally be fine with if they learned every single little detail. And in the 90s, Nike chose to sit too far on maximizing the margin side of things, and they intentionally turned a blind eye to what was going on in the factories, and they were in the wrong, because it led to exploiting people. One of the things that Nike folks were really surprised by
at the time when the controversy came up is they were like, all the other shoe companies do it this
way. All the clothing companies do it this way. Why are we being picked on? Yeah, but Nike started
it, and they're the biggest. But I think it's even more than that people had come to love nike so
much and the brand represented so much that it was like a huge betrayal it was a disappointment
it was like oh i thought you were better than that you are about inspiring greatness and this
is not greatness and i think that's really interesting that like, yeah, this was part of Nike from the
beginning. But because of everything else that made Nike successful, it's super ironic that
they didn't hold themselves to the high standard that the whole company was all about. And then
their customers were like, yo, this doesn't compute. Yeah, they sort of discovered they
couldn't have their cake and eat it too of saying,
we are the brand that inspires you.
Oh, but by the way, anytime there's an issue, oh, that's one of our supplier's problems.
We simply don't make shoes.
Even though it is technically correct, the court of a public opinion will find you guilty.
So, okay, back to the mid-1970s.
In 1974, these pieces of the Nike startup playbook, the inventing sports marketing, basically sponsoring quote-unquote pre for $5,000, the outsourcing your financing to your retail partners, and then the global outsourcing of manufacturing, all of this combines in 1974 for just an explosive year. I can't remember exactly
the phrase, but in Shoe Dog, Phil says something like, the limiters were off, the governors were
off, we could run. They do $8 million in revenue in 1974. Which is up almost 100%. They nearly doubled again in 1973 to 1974.
1974 is also a momentous year for Blue Ribbon because they finally settle the legal battles
with Onitsuka and they win in court. Amazingly. Ultimately, they settle for Onitsuka paying
Blue Ribbon $400,000, which by this point in time is a pittance to Blue Ribbon.
But the actual butterfly flaps its wings,
hugely important outcome of this for the Nike journey
is that the court case with Onitsuka leads to one Rob Strasser
coming into Phil Knight and the Nike Orbit.
He was their lawyer on this case, right?
Yes.
Strasser was the junior attorney at the Portland law firm that was working on the Nike case.
And Strasser is just a force.
I mean, this guy was not cut out to be a corporate lawyer.
He actually comes in after the case is settled
to Blue Ribbon as in-house counsel,
but then Phil quickly realizes like,
oh, this guy is way more valuable to me than as my lawyer.
You know, everybody else at Nike at the time,
they're all former runners.
Most of them ran for Bowerman.
Strasser is, I think, about six foot two
and weighs over 300 pounds.
And he has an equally outsized personality
as his actual size.
He gets the nickname within Nike of Rolling Thunder.
And boy, does he roll like thunder.
And while he and Phil, of course, did ultimately clash,
and there was the terrible betrayal that happened.
For a while, they were thick as thieves.
Yes. So the first thing that Phil puts Rob in charge of is taking this really early sports marketing concept of doing sponsorship deals with athletes and blowing it out. So they had already, before
Rob joined, done the first official sponsorship of an athlete with Ili Nastassi, the tennis player.
They paid him $10,000 to wear Nike tennis shoes. Oh boy, how quaint. When Strasser comes in,
he starts doing sponsorships in a systematic manner. So he goes out and negotiates
with athletes and agents. He signs up like half the NBA for peanuts. Now, not the big stars,
but the journeymen, the role players in the NBA. He just obliterates them and their agents
in negotiations. I mean, they're getting like, I don't even know the dollar amounts, but not a lot.
They're getting free shoes, basically.
And then Nike is showing up on nationally televised broadcasts every single night.
Yep.
This leads then to a bigger initiative that Strasser puts together.
And if you've watched the recent movie Air about Air Jordan,
this totally gets played as like a Sonny Vaccaro thing.
Strasser hires Sonny Vaccaro to come in
and build the college basketball program for Nike. And this is another just equally brilliant
move. So Strasser gets Sonny to go around the country and sign up coaches of the big basketball schools to become Nike coaches. Now, there's nothing
preventing the coaches at schools from being consultants, advisors, running Nike clinics.
No, you can pay them whatever you want.
You can pay them whatever you want, right?
And they can tell their teams to do whatever they want. There's no contract between the team and
the coach about wearing shoes. But if the coach says, hey, I really like this shoe company,
you should wear the shoes on court.
What do you think the players are going to do?
It's actually a team policy.
Yeah, exactly.
So within a month of working on this,
Strasser and Vaccaro have got UNLV, Georgetown, Texas, Arkansas.
They get legendary coach Jimmy V at Iona to sign up to be committed to being Nike
coaches and their teams wearing Nike. And this is hilarious. So all this is happening. The Washington
Post gets word to this. They run a real pearl clutchy article saying that this is shameful.
Nike is commercializing the purity of college athletics. Like, oh my God, give me a break.
Like these kids are being exploited.
Like at least they're getting free shoes here now.
In the article, the post mistakenly says that Iowa is one of the colleges that Nike has
signed up, not Iona.
So Lute Olsen, the coach at Iowa, who's legendary, he goes on and coaches at Arizona.
Lots of listeners probably know who Lute Olsen is. He's in the Hall of Fame now. Instead of being pissed off that he was
included in this shameful article with the Post, he calls up Nike and he's like,
yo, can I get in on this? So then they sign up Lute at Iowa and then Arizona and he becomes a
big Nike coach. It's incredible. Strasser then takes the same playbook to college football. Signs all the big coaches in schools, all the big powerhouses for
peanuts. This is incredible. Now, selling football cleats is never a big business for Nike, but
college football is huge. I mean, still huge. A lot of eyeballs on those swooshes.
A lot of eyeballs on those swooshes. And this is so clarifying of what their sports marketing strategy is.
These endorsement deals are not about the sneakers that that basketball player is going to sell.
Or, oh, I want to buy the cleats that my favorite college football team is wearing on the field.
No one else plays football other than college football students and the very few NFL players that exist.
So there's really nothing to buy.
But what you do see are these swooshes.
And it's cementing that brand in your head of this is what real athletes wear.
So one thing that's worth mentioning, this is sort of obvious,
but didn't click for me until really getting pretty deep in the research here for Nike.
There are actually only three sports that matter. So Nike, Adidas, Reebok, they sponsor lots of sports, but running,
basketball, and tennis are the only sports that matter because those are the only shoes that
normal people can wear. Normal people don't wear baseball cleats or football cleats or soccer cleats, no matter how popular those sports are. Even to this day, all the marketing, all the athletes,
everything you see on TV of Nike and the other athletics companies, it's not about getting you
to buy the shoes that that athlete is wearing. It's about getting you to buy Nike.
Right. The funnel is every single one of those is a brand impression. So consider them all billboards.
And then they just need to manufacture enough products to meet needs in your life that you can go and participate in the brand story by buying things that you need in your life. And you're inspired
to do that because what you saw on those moving billboards and all the players running around,
but the products that the players are wearing are made for them in their athletic journey.
And the products that you're buying at the store are things that are made for you in your athletic
and increasingly lifestyle journey. But you're inspired by what you see on the billboards.
You're buying victory.
Right. And so their whole business eventually becomes figuring out this multi-sided equation
of can we create enough demand? Like it literally on their income statement says
demand creation by doing these sponsorships. And then can we create the right product mix
for people to participate in our brand by giving us their dollars?
Yes. Now, I don't want to say that Strasser alone architected this grand strategy, or even I'm not really sure that Phil or anybody at Nike understood this at this time.
But certainly Strasser executes this in just an incredible way.
Nobody else was doing this.
The college coaches, they ran the table.
And it was just an incredible run in the late 70s.
All the while, the jogging movement is just getting bigger and bigger and bigger.
Right.
Keep in mind, they still only make running shoes.
There's no apparel.
There's no shoes for other sports, really.
There's some things on the margins. But 90 plus percent of their revenue is running shoes. Yeah. The core sales, what they are marketing is go buy a waffle trainer and wear them with
your blue jeans. Yep. So through the late 70s, revenue just doubles year over year over year.
They go from 14 million in sales to 29 million in sales to $29 million in sales to $71 million in sales,
finishing out in 1979 with $150 million in sales. Yes. It was 1976 when they officially changed the
actual name of the company to Nike. Then 1977 was a huge year. As you say, they do $70 million in
revenue that year. They signed John McEnroe. They crossed 1,000 employees, so it's getting to be a real beefy organization.
Two other things.
They bring one former NASA engineer
and true mad scientist, Frank Rudy,
into the fold.
The inventor of air soul technology.
Which Phil Knight is not a fan of when he hears about the idea.
Well, he thinks it's a crazy idea at first.
Phil's meeting with Rudy.
He's like, I don't even know how Rudy got into my office.
Who is this crazy dude?
He's about to kick him out.
And then Rudy's like, yeah, Adidas didn't want it either.
And Phil's like, oh, you said the A word.
All right, let me try it.
So supposedly Phil goes for a run in the prototypes of the Air
Soles, and he's like, yeah, actually, these are pretty great. And we should say, for anybody who
doesn't know, everything that you hear of now, the Air Max, the Air Jordan, the Air Force One,
it is a literal air bag. Actually, it's a nitrogen bag that sits in the midsole. So think about
the thing between the lower sole, the rubber on the bottom, and inside
of the insole, basically the part of the shoe that you can't get to that's underneath your heel.
And sometimes that runs all the way across, all the way up to the toe, that replaces foam cushioning
instead using a little airbag that magically doesn't pop. Yeah, I mean, Rudy really was a genius. So Phil's like, all right, let's do it.
He tasks, who else? Rob Strasser with going and doing a deal with Rudy. They do a deal. Rudy
gets between 10 to 20 cent royalty for each pair of Air sole technology shoes that Nike sells.
Eventually Nike would just buy Rudy's company and Rudy would become an employee of Nike. So still here in 1977, Strasser is just on fire.
I don't know the full context around this.
Scott Reams has a great LinkedIn post.
But as best as we can tell, Ben, as you said, the company was growing hugely.
There are all these new employees there who are just kind of taken for granted that Nike is winning.
Strasser gets kind of pissed off one day, and he goes to his typewriter, and he fires off a memo.
He Xeroxes, he copies this memo, and pastes it up on the walls all around the office of Nike.
10 principles. And this document is just amazing.
We've tweeted it before.
It's going around the internet.
Yeah, it's going around the internet,
but it's going around the internet
described in the following way.
Here is the document that Phil Knight wrote
articulating Nike's principles.
Here are the things that are wrong with that statement.
One, Phil Knight did not
write it. Rob Strasser did. Two, Nike's principles. Also incorrect. When this was written, it was
actually still Blue Ribbon Sports, so that it was not yet the Nike Corporation. Three, the top of
the document has this like thin, wispy swoosh. That was never the Nike swoosh.
This is someone's attempt who doctored this at some point
to make it look like
some old version of the swoosh.
There is an old version of the swoosh,
which we will link to in our sources.
It is still in the USPTO
for the swoosh trademark.
It is a hand-drawn version,
Carolyn's hand-drawn version of the swoosh
that looks nothing like
this weird thin, wispy thing that was like doctored and added to the document. So not Nike Inc., not the swoosh,
there was never a swoosh on the document. It was done on a typewriter. How are you going to do that?
And three, not Phil Knight. But yes, oh my god, these principles are amazing,
and we're going to go through them. We want to thank our longtime friend of the show, Vanta, the leading trust management
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Yeah, Vanta is the perfect example of the quote that we talk about all the time here on Acquired,
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taste better, i.e. spend your time and resources only on what's actually going to move the needle
for your product and your customers and outsource everything else that doesn't.
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friend of the show, Christina, Vanta's CEO, all acquired listeners get $1,000 of free credit.
Vanta.com slash acquired. Okay, David, what are these principles?
All right. Nike principles, according to Rob Strasser in 1977. One, our business is change. Two, oh, this is so good. We are on offense all
the time. Three, we already alluded to, perfect results count, not a perfect process, break the
rules, fight the law. Number four, this is as much about battle as about business. Five, assume
nothing, make sure people keep their promises.
Push yourselves. Push others. Stretch the possible. Number six, live off the land. Number seven,
your job isn't done until the job is done. Eight, dangers, with an underline as a heading.
Bureaucracy, personal ambition, energy takers versus energy givers, knowing our weaknesses,
don't get too many things on the platter. Number nine, it won't be pretty. And then number 10,
if we do the right things, we'll make money damn near automatic. It's so good. It's so good.
That last one is so spot on for any business through to this day.
It's so easy to get wrapped up on all the other crap.
You do the right things.
You make product that customers love.
You market it right.
You build a brand.
You will make money damn near automatic.
So I read these differently than I used to read them.
Because when I didn't know Nike's journey, I sort of would just read them and be like,
yeah, that's awesome.
Or like, wow, that's so pithy.
I can't believe their official corporate values
are in such a pithy way.
No, this is stream of consciousness,
all from Rob Strasser, all into the typewriter.
And like, some of them are things
that Nike would never say today
because it shows the trade-offs inherent in their business.
I mean, live off the land, it's cringeworthy, right?
It's almost like, you guys, you had this huge labor issue.
It's not good.
So you sort of see where some of this stuff comes from.
Break the rules, fight the law.
I think there's also something very clear.
Dangers, bureaucracy, personal ambition.
Like, this is a foreshadow of Rob Strasser
hating the bureaucracy at Nike after its IPO that we'll talk about in a second,
clashing with Phil Knight.
Developing his own personal ambition.
And developing his own personal ambition, leaving and going to Adidas. So there's like
so much in here that when you really start to know the company's history and story and
the headspace that he was in when he punched this out, it reads entirely differently to me than I sort of used to just read it as a, hey, I love
Nike, a brand. Wow, so cool. I wish I could work at a company that had these pithy, punchy values.
Yeah, this is definitely one of those cases where ignorance is bliss.
Yeah, but man, they're awesome. The one that is still in Nike's maxims today that they distribute
to employees that is,
David, something you and I both hold near and dear and think of with acquired is,
we're on offense all the time. You don't win by playing defense.
Nope. Okay, so we're approaching 1980. They're about to go public, and they are entirely a running shoe company. Still no sign of the Nike that they are today, where they have apparel,
where they're diversified across a zillion sports. And from their revenue, they're basically a running shoe company that
makes shoes for men. That is where their revenue comes from. So Nike IPOs, the second week of
December in 1980, the same week as Apple. Unbelievable. It's amazing. You get all the
way through Shoe Dog, there is basically no mention of market cap at IPO.
It's the craziest thing.
Like it really underscores
how much nobody believed enterprise value mattered then.
Yep.
It was about $400 million, the market cap at IPO.
Apple, for comparison's sake, was $1.8 billion.
Now, interestingly, before they went public,
Bowerman sold most of his stake back to Phil Knight.
Actually, this was related to some of the financings earlier,
but as Nike got bigger,
he just didn't want to be a major listed shareholder
in a highly visible public company.
Certainly, he was in retirement age
towards the end of his life.
He was like, I'm going to sell my stake back to Phil.
So when they went public, after the IPO,
Phil owned 46% of the company and was overnight
one of the richest people in America. And the craziest thing is like one of the richest people
in America then was $178 million. Yes, quite different. Now, he was far from the top richest
person in America, but still this made national headlines. Yeah. So this is where
Shoe Dog ends, which is kind of crazy. I had forgotten this before I went back and reread it.
There's no Jordan. There's no huge fall from grace that is about to happen for Nike,
basically right after they go public. Phil picked an interesting time to end the story.
Very much so, especially because right after they go public, Phil picked an interesting time to end the story. Very much so, especially because right after they go public,
Phil goes on sabbatical for a year.
It's sort of like, you know, the job's done.
Wash my hands of it.
Ben, the job's not done until the job is done.
There you go.
But like the whole company, there was a lot of hubris going on.
They're on top.
We own the running shoe market.
We've been in this magical,
secular growing trend forever.
And it's just surely going to continue, right?
And the fitness boom continues,
but running is not exactly
the thing that keeps carrying.
I mean, they have 50% market share
in running shoes at this point in America.
And yet their growth in the future is
going to be dictated by where they go from there, because it's really hard to have more than, you
know, 50% market share in an industry like this. Early Nike did so many things right, but they made
one critical mistake. They mistook the running and the jogging boom for the broader fitness boom.
The broader fitness boom was a massive secular
trend that continues through to this day. The running boom was a cyclical trend that was part
of the fad-driven fitness cycle. And by the early 80s, as we're heading into everything that the
80s was and that the 70s were not,
running and jogging is out and aerobics are in.
And Nike absolutely refused to see that and refused to do aerobics like on principle.
It's fascinating.
I mean, in 1980, Reebok USA is founded.
And by 1988, Reebok eclipses Nike in
sales. Yes, at well over
a billion dollars. And it's not like
Nike fell out of favor in running
and it's not like people who were
running stopped running, but
Nike had ridden the running boom
at this insane growth rate of
running and even if running continued
its growth rate was going to massively taper off
and they were going to stop growing their market share. So they really did need to look elsewhere.
And I think it was pure hubris that blinded them from finding their next market.
So Reebok, funny, originally a British company, started as Foster & Sons. They were the company
that made the track shoes for the 1924 British Olympic team that was the basis for the movie Chariots of
Fire. The Reebok we all know, well, not today, but back then, is a completely different animal.
It's a marketing-driven company started by a guy named Paul Fireman, who is American.
And pretty quickly, they developed a business plan to cash in on the aerobics
fad, and they made a shoe that, in
Nike's principled opinion, sucked, but it went really great with leg warmers. It was all white.
It had soft leather that wrinkled. It looked good. Women loved it. It was everything that Nike was
not. And their rise, like you said, Ben, was even steeper and faster than Nike's. Ironically, Reebok would end
up much later getting acquired by Adidas and then spun back out to private equity recently.
Wow. So financially, they're sitting pretty pretty. They've just raised $22 million in the
IPO, which then was a lot of money. They basically wouldn't need any more money after that. They
raised one smaller pipe later in their
history. But the company was basically built on debt financing and this $22 million in the bank
from IPO. And you can see how they got fat and lazy. Their whole life, they were starved for
capital. Finally, they had it. Their whole life, they were the underdog. They're not the underdog.
They've got half the running market and this dominant brand where they just steamrolled the competition to get into all these sports
deals. But right at the same time as the aerobics boom is coming up, Adidas is becoming a very real
competitor in the sports marketing deals too. And so Nike is kind of realizing like, ooh, we are
not nearly as well capitalized as them. And they're kind of going to come eat our lunch
and all these deals where we just figured out that you can pay people and they'll wear your stuff.
So our cheap brand advertising is kind of going away. And meanwhile, in our core consumer actual
reason people buy truckloads of shoes, the fitness market, the swooshing sound you hear is that going to Reebok. Yes. So interestingly,
financially, there only are a couple quarters where Nike's revenue declines. I think that's
because of the futures program. Kind of saves their skin again. Retailers had to commit six
plus months in advance to their orders. And yeah, Nike was able to at least maintain
revenue through a lot of this. But the actual underlying dynamics of the business are ugly
at this point in time. The market, like I said, is swooshing away. So that brings us to 1984.
Phil Knight actually wrote in the letter to shareholders that year,
1984, like George Orwell predicted, was not a good year for Nike. Everything that we talked
about is happening. But 1984 was also the seed of something pretty incredible that would make
everything that happened before in Nike look like child's play.
And that would be a young kid from North Carolina,
Michael Jordan, who walks in the door.
This is such a fun time to do the Nike episode
because the movie Air just came out,
which really is like a fun kind of summer blockbuster movie.
Also very, very inaccurate in how it
portrays everything. Oh yeah. No, it's a very fun, campy work of fiction. I mean, it gets the broad
point right. Michael Jordan saved Nike. Absolutely. 100%. The characters involved and how it all went
down and what the deals were. No. Almost all wrong. There's a lot
of little dynamics that we can be mad about. Like, it was kind of Strasser's baby to do the deal,
not Vaccaro's baby to do the deal. You know, Vaccaro never flew to North Carolina to negotiate
at Michael's house with Michael's mother. Like, all of this doesn't actually happen. They weren't
going to fire everyone in the basketball division if this didn't work. But again, factual inaccuracies
are fine. It's the characters that
they messed up that really bothered me. I know I'm doing a review of a movie that maybe not all
of you have seen, so spoilers, but like, God, they make Phil Knight just not at all who Phil Knight
is. They make him out to be kind of a rube, and after watching every interview he's ever given
and reading all this stuff about him, and I just don't think that the Ben Affleck character
is anything like Phil Knight.
Anyway, air is entertaining.
Here's the real story.
The big important thing from Michael Jordan,
the Air Jordan 1,
and then everything it became in the Jordan brand
is that it didn't just save Nike.
It changed the world. That's a super
campy thing to say, but it is 100% true. If you walk down any street, pretty much anywhere in
the world today, or you go into any event, building, venue, whatever, and you look at what
people are wearing, they are wearing sneakers. And they are mostly wearing basketball shoes and running shoes. That was not the case before Air Jordans. Air
Jordans and Michael Jordan made sneakers into culture. So Nike takes a chance. There's a kid
out of North Carolina. He's picked third in the draft. He's really good.
He just took the game-winning shot
to win the NCAA Final Four.
But, you know, he's not LeBron in high school.
Yeah, he's picked third.
Right.
I remember going to see LeBron as a high school athlete
because I live near Akron, Ohio,
and he went to St. Vincent St. Mary's famously.
And, like, he was very obviously
one of the best NBA players
as a freshman in high school.
Jordan wasn't quite that. He was a different type of player. He was not as big and as physical as
a lot of the guys dominating the NBA at the time. And so doing a big deal with Jordan really was
more of a gamble for Nike than they would do with really any athlete today.
All right, so let's talk about what that deal was and why it was so different.
Nike, like we just said, their back's against the wall.
They need to do something to save the company.
And it's actually Strasser who puts this deal together.
And together with Sonny Vaccaro, as portrayed in the movie, goes after Jordan.
But Strasser puts it all together.
So the deal is a $2.5 million minimum guaranteed payout over five years.
But that's not actually how the economics work. The revolutionary aspect of the deal was the payouts were calculated as a 5% royalty on gross revenue from the sales of Air Jordans. The whole line, the shoes,
the merchandise, everything. It's almost like the way the book industry works. They gave him an
advance on the first 500k a year, but once he sold through the advance, he was going to get a five
percent participation on any of the shoe sales. Right. And it goes even deeper than that. This
structure was completely revolutionary. So the way shoe
deals were done at the time, so Magic Johnson and Larry Bird were the biggest stars in the NBA at
the time. They were both signed with Converse. Their deals were roughly $100,000 a year in cash
payments to wear the Converse weapons. Ben, have you ever worn the Converse weapons?
No, never.
Do you know what they are? No.
No, I. Do you know what they are? No.
No, I don't.
These are not Airbirds.
They weren't signature shoes.
Nike says, we are going to make you a signature shoe, and then you are going to participate
in the upside from that.
They did that intentionally.
It wasn't Jordan who asked for that.
Nike wanted it that way.
They thought, we need to incentivize Jordan to build the dream here.
We need to tie this all together.
And it's brilliant counter-positioning because all their competitors basically couldn't do it.
Converse has too many stars to go all around signing these,
A, you get some of the upside deals.
Like Nike had freaking nothing to lose.
Of course, they could give away some of the upside.
If Converse is going to do this or Adidas is going to do this,
they actually do have quite a bit to lose by giving away upside.
Of course, Nike, it turns out, it was a big paycheck
that they cut Jordan for years and years and years.
But Nike was truly doing something here that their competitors could not.
And it was smart to figure out what are the things that,
by being small and cash-constrained and under-penetrated in the NBA,
what strengths do we have?
Right. It goes even further.
Also in the deal, the previous year,
Nike had sold 400,000 pairs of Nike basketball shoes.
They include a clause that Jordan gets a royalty
on incremental sales in future years
beyond the baseline of everything in the Nike basketball line.
I did not realize that.
This is how it works.
We alluded to this earlier in the episode.
It's the halo effect.
Yes, the Jordans are important,
and we'll talk all about the Air Jordan 1s in a second here,
but it's not about the Jordans.
It's about the swoosh,
and it's about the halo effect
and the lifting up of the whole company's
sales. I had no idea that Jordan got a royalty of non-Jordan shoes. He did. And this would
eventually morph into the Jordan brand and the Jordan line and Zion Williams and Jason Tatum.
They are Jordan athletes. This is part of it. So Nike also guarantees a minimum ad spend to promote the Jordan line. They're all in
here. They also give Jordan stock options in the company. This is a hell of a deal, and it's smart
for Nike. So there's something kind of interesting here, which is I was trying to figure out if I
would describe this as a partnership. David, you and I are partners in Acquired.
We together benefit from the upside and the downside.
That is what makes a partnership.
Is this a partnership?
Is there any scenario where Jordan has any downside
or is all of the downside owned by Nike?
No, it's all owned by Nike because there's the minimum guaranteed payment.
Right.
For $2.5 million over five years.
That seems like a pittance today.
But that was huge.
Nobody else was getting that kind of money.
So here's the thing,
and this was chronicled in the movie.
This is absolutely true.
Jordan didn't want to work with Nike.
Nike was for the second-rate pro players.
Jordan wanted Adidas.
Jordan was a kid in the 80s, like a teenager.
To the extent that sneakers had started to transcend into culture, it was Adidas. Jordan was a kid in the 80s, like a teenager. To the extent that sneakers had started
to transcend into culture, it was Adidas. Hip-hop, breakdancing, track suits, shell toes, that was
Adidas. That was what Jordan wanted. And so to put a finer point on this here, Jordan didn't want to
be Nike's partner, so he basically wasn't,
and they backed up the truck for him.
And some of that truck was in variable comp,
and some of that truck was in cash.
But make no mistake, that is what this is,
is Nike having no leverage,
Jordan having all the leverage,
and getting a landmark, unbelievable deal,
still to this day, unmatched,
in terms of the amount of dollar outflows that has gone to an athlete because of it. Yeah. So Jordan actually takes the deal and shops it to Adidas afterwards.
And he's like, I really don't want to go with Nike. Like, I really want to be with Adidas.
You don't have to match this. Can you just come anywhere in the ballpark close? And Adidas is like,
we could give you $100,000 a year. And so reluctantly, Jordan goes with Nike.
But you're so right, and it's so important.
It sets up the incentives.
Even though Jordan has no downside, he's like, well.
Jordan also is on offense all the time.
This is a guy who plays to win.
So you give him the incentives,
he and Phil Knight are going to get along real well.
So here's what happens.
In that first year, the Air Jordan 1s, this is going to get along real well. So here's what happens.
In that first year, the Air Jordan 1s,
this is going to be very incredible.
Some of you know this.
Some of you are going to listen to this.
You're going to be blown away.
Hang on, because there is a second part to this story that is not what you expect.
In the first year, Air Jordan 1s sell $126 million.
That's the shoes and the associated merchandise with it.
David, do you know what their goal was?
$3 million over three years.
So it's about 15% of Nike's entire revenue for the whole year.
In the first year, they sold 1.5 million pair in the first six weeks after releasing them.
So put aside the halo royalties that Jordan is getting on the rest of Nike basketball.
Let's take just the 5% of that $126 million that he made in his first year.
That's $6.3 million that Jordan got from Nike in 1985.
Do you know what Jordan's contract with the Bulls was?
It's too perfect.
$6.3 million over seven years.
So he made the exact same amount from the Nike deal in his first year.
He made his entire seven-year contract with the Bulls in his first year.
I always wanted to think of the story as
like, wow, Jordan took some risk and it paid off big on the back end. It's like it paid off
immediately and he had to make no trade-offs to do it. He got the cash guarantees and he got the
royalty upside and it happened immediately and it only got bigger from there. Well, trade-offs.
I think there are two things. One, none of this would have happened
if Jordan didn't turn out to be Jordan. Totally. And in fact, that's literally true. If he wasn't,
what were the three clauses? If he didn't either win rookie of the year or win the NBA finals or
win the MVP or something, there was an out in the contract. Oh, interesting. I didn't know that.
They were basically like, we will give you the entire farm or 5% of the farm if you are a phenom. And if you're not. Interesting. So there was some
protection for Nike. Yes. And I think he's Michael Jordan. So whatever the thing was, he got all
three of them. Oh, it wasn't the NBA finals. It was become an all-star. Ah, interesting. Which I
think he did in the first year. Yes. Yeah. Yes. That's right, because the other players kept the ball away from him,
and they froze him out because they were so jealous. Okay. One, Jordan had to become Jordan.
Two, though, he sacrificed a huge amount. There's this great quote from Jordan when he retired for
the first time. He said, Phil Knight and Nike have made me into a dream. And that's very sweet on the surface, but that's very dark underneath of it.
Michael Jordan's life was no longer the life of a normal person or anything close to it.
And now to a certain extent that happens to every star, but like today you're like, duh.
But back then, this was the first time this happened. Jordan became a dream. And that's very hard at the thing you're already passionate about. By the way, I'm going to use your face on $5 million of media,
of paid media in the next few months. It's like, whoa, what? But that's it for any normal life that
I get, like right out the bat. Right. And he's a kid. Yes. So again, like this is all normal today.
Everybody understands this. LeBron knew exactly what he was getting into
when he signed with Nike out of high school
and went to the NBA.
But like this was the beginning of all of this.
So why did they sell so well?
That's sort of this interesting $126 million
in the first year.
Like why was the demand for them crazy?
Did people just love Michael Jordan?
Nike, this is, I think, the first time they really flex their ability to recognize an
opportunity for an incredible marketing moment.
So back in 84, Jordan starts wearing in preseason and in warmups some modified airships because
Nike's actually not done making the Air Jordan 1 yet.
And so he's wearing these black and red shoes that are now called the Jordan Breds, B-R-E-D.
And these shoes are black and red. And in the NBA, you wear white and that's it. And so Jordan's
getting ready to play in the league with these black and red shoes, which again, he hasn't actually worn on court.
And to this day, no one can find footage of him wearing
the black and red precursor to the Air Jordan 1,
these modified airships, on the court.
So we're not actually sure that it happened.
Right, because it takes a while to actually make a new shoe.
So the Air Jordan 1 is still in production.
Right.
But this black and red catches the league's attention. David Stern says, hey, you can't wear those. So the Air Jordan 1 It doesn't mention the Air Jordan 1. It just says those black and red shoes. And this gives Nike this incredible opportunity to make a marketing moment out of it. Now,
it would have actually been very expensive because the way that the fine worked technically,
after you dig into it for a while, is $1,000 for the first infraction, $5,000 for the second
infraction. It may have even been the case that it was $10,000 for the third.
Over an 82-game season and facing possible ejection, it's a big tab for Nike and it's a
big problem for Jordan. And before he could even wear these black and red shoes in a game or have
the opportunity to, they switched. The Air Jordan 1, they made white and red. The one that is iconic that you can go
buy and then they make all the remakes out of, the AJ1 is not the bread. And the bread is the
thing that kicked up the big issue. Anyway, so Jordan, they just film him in this incredible
commercial where he's just standing there and the camera pans down from his head to his feet,
where he's wearing the black and red, and it just goes bong, bong, and puts these black
bars over the shoes. And they make a whole big deal out of the fact that these shoes are so great,
they are banned in the NBA, and you can go buy them at your local retailer. And people go nuts.
So great. Such a good story.
And the coda to all this is, even after reading all these books and watching all these videos So great. Such a good story. after that. I have even heard that no dollars ever exchanged between Nike and the NBA or Nike
and Michael Jordan because the fine was never levied. It was a threat that then Nike made
that Eric Jordan won before anything could be enforced. If anybody knows, please join the Slack
and shoot us a DM or put it in the general channel. I'm very curious.
The thing that's so great though, Nike, right? Like it doesn't matter. It's the story. It's the dream. Like it doesn't matter.
Right. They just put it in a freaking Hollywood movie that it was 5,000 times 82 games and that's all anybody's going to remember.
Oh, man. Okay. So I mentioned a minute ago about the other side of the Air Jordan 1 story. It's not the dark side of Michael Jordan's fame. I think this is crazy. I don't think anybody really knows this.
Nike sold $126 million worth of Air Jordan 1 shoes and merchandise in the first year.
Fact.
Another fact that gets put out there is that Nike sold $150 million of Air Jordan shoes and merchandise during the first three years. Now, if you look at that,
you're like, wait a minute. Huh? What happened? Something bad happened in years two and three.
Yes. And indeed, something bad did happen in years two and three and in year one.
Nike needed that first year of the Jordan deal to be a huge hit. So they stuffed the channel. They pushed so much product on retailers
and through the futures program and whatnot
that that's how they hit the $126 million in sales.
There wasn't actually $126 million of demand
for Jordan products that year.
So good commercial,
but not $126 million of demand commercial.
I mean, there probably was, I'm making this up,
$50, $70, $100 million of demand,
like unprecedented for any shoe in history for a single year.
But Nike also effectively took some steroids on this one.
Yep.
That turned into a huge problem
because the retailers and the buying public
had a huge hangover the next year in year two,
that was compounded by two issues. One, Jordan broke his foot early in the season of his second
year, missed most of the season. Two, the Air Jordan 2s sucked. There's kind of no other way
to put it. This was where Strasser,
who again had masterminded all of this,
the Jordan deal, the Jordan 1s,
working with his collaborator, Peter Moore,
all this stuff, they kind of went rogue.
The Air Jordan 2s cost $100.
The Air Jordan 1s cost $65.
The Air Jordan 2s were made in Italy out of premium Italian leather.
This doesn't sound like the Nike playbook.
This also doesn't sound like a good basketball shoe.
Do you want to play basketball in Gucci leather?
Probably not.
Jordan didn't like the shoes.
They were not good to play basketball in.
They were super stiff.
They were hard to break in.
They didn't fit his style right.
So, A, he wasn't playing.
B, he wasn't incentivized to push them. I mean, he was economically incentivized, but he didn't fit his style right. So A, he wasn't playing. B, he wasn't incentivized to push them.
I mean, he was economically incentivized, but he didn't like the shoe.
It all kind of fell apart.
On top of that, as this is all happening,
Strasser, and more too along with him,
but really Strasser is becoming increasingly rogue within Nike. He breaks away.
He starts a new division in a separate office complex from the rest of the company
called the New Products Division. Dude, this is like very Steve Jobs, Macintosh.
100%. I mean, literally, the parallels here, unfortunately comes to a tragic end.
He sets up his new campus, new division, you know, away from Knight, away from the rest of the
company. He mandates that all new product launches have to go through him and this new group and that
they're going to take control and streamline the process. And the Jordan 2s come out of this,
obviously it's not a very good shoe this becomes a big problem obviously
there's only one way that this is gonna end either strasser is gonna become ceo of nike
or strasser is gonna leave nike yep and strasser ain't gonna become ceo of nike because one phil
knight is ceo of nike two nike has a dual class voting structure phil knight controls all the Strasser ain't going to become CEO of Nike. Because one, Phil Knight is CEO of Nike.
Two, Nike has a dual-class voting structure.
Phil Knight controls all the high vote shares, and he controls the board.
So really, this is the end for Strasser.
They get in a huge fight in 1987.
Strasser leaves the company.
He goes off and takes Moore with him, Peter Moore. And they start a consulting firm in Portland called Sports Incorporated. All of which is fine, and you could
imagine a future where one day Knight and Strasser might reconcile, and they could be friends again
and say, wow, Rob, you've had such, you know an incredible part of the Nike journey, contribution to everything, we can bury the hatchet.
Well, Sports Incorporated takes on as one of their major clients, Adidas.
And eventually their only client.
And then eventually Adidas buys the company,
moves their North American headquarters to Portland, Oregon,
and makes Strasser the CEO of Adidas America. Oof. And then incredibly tragically,
this is just terrible. Eight months into the job, Strasser has a massive heart attack and dies,
I believe, at age 46. Oh, it's just terrible. Yeah. But the betrayal that this engenders it's irreversible ben you talked about earlier the
nike culture there's a quote from jeff johnson blue ribbon employee number one who i think had
already left the company at this point he's asked in the book just do it about rob becoming ceo of
adidas and he says i know they adidas aren't what they once were, but Adidas people were the Huns. I would
starve to death before I would work for Adidas. Wow. And then when Rob dies, Phil does not attend
his funeral. It's really just heartbreaking. There's a quote that sums it up in this Portland
Monthly article that talks about why Strasser isn't known to many people outside the companies
and why his role sort of fades into history.
And they say, why?
Because his work was vital to both,
which makes it incredibly difficult to neatly write him into the mythology of either one.
For Adidas, it was a brand revival,
conceived and executed by a fat American ex-Nike guy and his artsy partner.
For Nike, Strasser's overachievements are overshadowed,
if not severely tarnished, because he was a traitor.
From Phil Knight,
It might have been okay if he had just quit,
but he went to work for Adidas,
an intolerable betrayal I never forgave him.
Yeah, oof.
And still, the repercussions of this exist to this day.
Adidas' American headquarters are still in Portland, Oregon.
Yep.
And they poach a lot of Nike people.
Yep.
So, okay.
Back to Jordan.
The plot thickens here.
Jordan's not happy.
Strasser was his guy there?
Yeah.
Strasser was his guy.
Strasser leaves, starts this new company, starts working for Adidas,
becomes the CEO of Adidas. Jordan's going to go to Adidas. The writing's on the wall here.
I mean, Jordan's deal is up in 90, right? Not only is his deal up in 90, he tries to renegotiate. So in year three, Jordan is so unhappy. The wheels are in motion at Adidas.
Adidas with Strasser not yet at the helm, but whispering in the ear is going to be willing to
do a Jordan type deal for Jordan. Michael always wanted Adidas anyway. He's going to break the deal
with Nike and go with them. Yep. So back to Nike and Phil.
This is serious wartime mode. They schedule a pitch meeting with Jordan. This is, I think,
towards the end of year three of the deal to try and save him, to try and re-sign him. They're
willing to do anything. Renegotiate the deal, Give him more economics. Give him another shoe. Anything.
Phil goes to a bright young star within the Nike design group. Tinker Hatfield.
Formally of Nike's architecture and building planning team. He wasn't even
hired as a shoe designer. He was an architect. This is super important.
Tinker was another Bowerman guy.
He ran track for Bowerman in Oregon and studied architecture.
And then he comes into Nike
and together with Mark Parker,
who would become the CEO of Nike,
they designed the Air Max,
they designed the Air Trainer.
They're part of Nike's revival
on the running and training side
and competing ultimately in aerobics
with the Air Trainer.
Now that Strasser and Moore are gone, Tinker is the star that he can give Jordan. He says, go fly out to Chicago,
go with Howard White, Jordan's guy at Nike, go talk to him, come home like bearing your
shielder on it, essentially. So Tinker goes out. And remember, he's trained as
an architect and then became a shoe designer. What do architects do when they meet with their
clients? They ask them questions. They say, what do you want? What are your specifications?
Tinker sits down with Jordan and he's like, tell me what you don't like about the Jordan 2.
They were too tough to break in. Okay, cool. What else is wrong with them?
They're high tops. That's too much weight. I'm Michael Jordan. I need lightness on
my feet. I want to fly. I don't want the extra weight. Okay, cool. In an ideal world, Michael,
what shoe would you want? What would it look like? And Michael's like, well, I want a great
basketball shoe that will also look great off the court, but it needs to be both. It can't be like
the Jordan 2 that look great off the court, maybe, but sucked as a basketball shoe. Tinker's like, okay, noted. So he goes back to Nike,
works feverishly. Jordan comes in for this last-ditch pitch meeting. He shows up four hours
late. Phil starts the meeting and is like, oh boy, here we go. Tinker, like an architect, has the shoe under a black cloth on the table,
just like Steve Jobs in the keynotes many years later. Phil hands the meeting over to Tinker,
and he's like, Michael, I took notes on our conversation. Here is the Jordan 3. And he pulls
the shroud off and hands the shoe to Jordan.
And he's like,
it's the shoe you asked for.
He goes right down the checklist.
Soft leather that doesn't need to be broken in.
You can wear a new pair in every single game.
Mid-cut height.
Not a high top.
Not a low top.
The support you need without the weight of a high top.
Elephant print leather
for style off the court
that won't detract from performance on the court. And then the pièce de résistance, no swoosh.
There's a little swoosh on the back tab. The main logo is the Jordan Jumpman logo on the tongue.
The Jumpman logo did exist beforehand.
Peter Moore had actually designed it.
But it was never in the prime position.
It was always the swoosh and then the Jumpman.
That's like heretical at Nike at this point,
to not have the swoosh be the main character.
But Michael Jordan didn't really want to be a Nike.
So the only way to keep him is to kind of hide the swoosh.
It's kind of like hearkening back to the beginning of like,
Phil Knight could have had 100% of Blue Ribbon Sports,
or he could have had 51% of Bill Bowerman's Blue Ribbon Sports.
Yeah.
It's pretty crazy because the whole point of these deals is to get swoosh impressions.
And they were willing to say,
we think it's going to be profitable enough in the long run to be in business with you
that we will not put the swoosh on the side of these shoes.
And they were extremely right to do that.
Indeed.
So as part of that, they renegotiate the deal.
Jordan agrees to stay with Nike.
The Jordan brand becomes its own sub-segment within Nike.
Its own shoes, its own clothes, its own colors, its own logo, its own advertising,
all managed standalone. And then ultimately, this would take several years, but it would become
Zion Williamson wears Jordans. Jason Tatum wears Jordans.
The University of Michigan, for some reason, is Jordan, not Nike as their official uniform
supplier. UNC is Jordans. And so do you know what changed in that renegotiation?
Yes.
So they extend the deal for seven more years,
I believe at the same 5% royalty on gross sales,
but there's the new massive further commitment
to making the Jordan sub-brand much more of its own brand.
And they up the total guarantee to at least $18 million. So from two and a half to 18 in three years. Wow.
Ultimately, just like the two and a half, that's meaningless because Jordan brand sales go back up in 88, 89, 90, on and on and on, 200 million, 300 million, 400 million,
500 million in sales. This is when they do the Spike and Mike ads with Spike Lee.
It's got to be the shoes.
And Wyden Kennedy, got to be the shoes. Jordan earns over the course of this contract
easily at least $100 million, easily.
Over the seven year.
Yeah, it's just dwarfing what he's earning from the NBA.
In his total career from basketball contracts, he made something like $90 million. So, I mean,
you even said it in that first year, just from the get-go with his Nike earnings were way outpacing
his NBA earnings.
Yep. Now, interestingly, at retail,
again, back to this Halo strategy,
the Jordan 3s and then all Jordans subsequently,
really, this is when they become the luxury brand.
The Jordans are Nike's Louis Vuitton trunk.
Yeah, they make a lot of revenue from them.
Yeah, they sell a lot of them.
But you know what?
It also helps them sell a lot of wallets.
Yeah. So the Jordan 3 is priced at like $200 or something? $100. But this is 1988,
1989. Right. Okay. That makes sense. All right. So you mentioned how much he made at the end of that seven-year contract. There's something mind-blowing going on today in 2023 with the Jordan brand,
and I don't think people quite have a handle on what has happened in the last three years.
So the Jordan brand is the fastest-growing part of Nike.
Nike grows like 10% a year.
The Jordan brand, over the last three years, keeps growing at like 35%.
And it does billions in revenue growing at 35%. So this past
year, they just reported, FY22, the Jordan brand did $6.6 billion in revenue. Let's assume that the
5% figure is still accurate enough. It's accurate-ish. Jordan's making over $300 million
a year from the Jordan brand at a five-ish percent royalty. He retired for the last time 20 years ago.
There is no athlete making $300 million a year. Michael Jordan will make five, maybe $10 billion
over his lifetime from the Jordan brand. Absolutely unprecedented for an athlete.
He's effectively a founder of a brand that is growing 35% at $6-plus billion revenue scale.
With all the operations and distribution and marketing of Nike.
It is unfathomable. So he did active work for many years in order to build the brand equity,
but he does passive work now to keep it alive. Of course, he has sort of input on who they're
signing to the Jordan brand. He has sort of a vote in that. But in Michael staying out of trouble
and Michael staying the dream, he builds a tremendous amount of brand equity.
And Nike reaps 95% of that.
So they're perfectly happy with this arrangement.
They're happy to cut him $300 million checks.
I would be too if I was earning the other side of the $6.6 billion.
But Jordan totally has had to shape his life
in order to be the dream Michael and continue to be that.
He is so synonymous with the brand that he has to be perfect to keep the brand doing what it's doing.
Yes. And that's the dark side for Michael.
One more really critical thing I want to say about all this and Jordan and the building of the dream and the changing of culture
before we move on to all the rest of Nike history, which we will cover here. You can't ignore too, again, the timing in this.
All of this coincided with the rise of ESPN and SportsCenter. And that was so important.
In the early days, like when Steve Prefontaine was on the cover of Sports Illustrated or some
of the tennis players, it was like, there was a Nike line of, oh, we could spend X million dollars in advertising, but if we get our shoes on the cover of Sports Illustrated, that's worth $20 million.
With ESPN and SportsCenter, those athletes and Michael Jordan being all over that 24-7 every night, that was $20 million a night of free advertising.
That's a great point. So off the back of the rise of the Jordan brand,
in 1988, they launched the Just Do It campaign with the very first, I think this is the first
Wyden and Kennedy ad, right? Second real big one. The first was the
Revolution ad with the Beatles that they did for the Air Max. Another Tinker Hatfield and
Mark Parker joint. And so they're kind of finding their footing again.
They're realizing that, okay, we can diversify outside of running.
We can find a lot of places to sell the dream.
We can make different products to monetize the dream, to let people participate.
Their market cap hits a billion dollars at this point in 1988.
So investors
are starting to wake up to like, huh, they're building something really special here. They
opened their first Nike town in Portland. The early 90s, late 80s, early 90s are just all good
for Nike. I think by 91, their market cap hit 5 billion. By 96, their market cap hit 10 billion.
And they're really just executing the strategy that we talked about, but at scale,
until they get hit with everything we already talked about on the labor challenges and that
controversy. So that's a tough few years. Interestingly, right around the dot-com crash
is also kind of tough for them. Their market cap drops from $20 billion to $8 billion. They weren't
in any way yet a tech company,
but tough times right around the same time period.
An interesting thing from that front, losing Kobe to Adidas was big.
Really big. And people forget this. People forget that Kobe was an Adidas athlete first.
Yes.
In the same way that people forget that Kanye was a Nike athlete or a Nike...
Right. Rapper.
Rapper first.
But yeah, those early 2000s were not a great time for Nike. But then interestingly,
Kobe was so unhappy at Adidas and wanted what Nike could give him that he bought Adidas out
of his deal to move over to Nike. Oh yeah, I have the numbers. So Kobe was with Adidas from 96 to 2002,
and he hated the Kobe 2s so bad that it's rumored that he paid $8 million to get out of his contract
so he could move over to Nike. Yeah. That was a huge win for Nike and a big turnaround. Like,
2002 is really when it started to get good again for them. Yeah. I'm sure part of that was the
shoes and, yeah, by all accounts, the Kobe 2s sucked.
I do think there is,
and this will get to analysis in a little bit,
Nike can do something for athletes,
for the big superstars,
that the other companies can't.
Oh, and right around the same time in 2003
is when LeBron came into the NBA
and Nike signed him out of high school.
Yep.
Okay, so 2002, they get Kobe. 2003, they get LeBron came into the NBA and Nike signed him out of high school. Yep.
Okay, so 2002, they get Kobe.
2003, they get LeBron.
They've cleaned up their image.
They're cleaning up their factories.
They're cleaning up their supply chain.
In 2003, they acquire Converse for $309 million.
They're once faux, and now Nike's in the multi-billion dollar market cap,
and Converse is a tiny fraction of that size.
2003, Michael Jordan retires.
And it's fascinating, just to get a quick data point,
the Jordan brand that year in 2003
is doing $700 million a year.
And today it's doing 6.6 billion.
And that's been the delta since he stopped playing basketball.
I mean, the thing is, both of those numbers are bonkers.
Right.
$700 million is bonkers. And $6 billion is bonkers.
Yeah. Jordan has completely transcended a sponsorship deal and turned into a brand.
The notion, the platonic ideal of Jordan is a brand more than a human.
So in 2006, another important thing happens. And most people didn't realize it at the time,
because keep in mind, 2006, over in Apple, Steve Jobs is still the CEO. So not a lot of people know this guy named Tim Cook's name, but Tim joins Nike's
board. I believe in like late 2005, he joined the board. He immediately starts helping Nike
into understanding how to use digital technology to transform their business. And in 2006,
they launched the Nike Plus iPod. Yes, yes. Which was not a terribly successful product in the market,
but man, did it help Nike understand where the puck is going.
And this was the first corporate use of plus in a product name.
Oh, was it really? This is the moment that has led to the terribleness of the sea
of digital corporate products today. We all have this to thank. Plus this, plus that, plus blah,
blah, blah. I'm surprised there's not a Jordan Plus out there. No, there's not because Jordan
is too well managed a brand. I actually did not know that. It's funny. That was the origin of
Plus. It was interesting because it was this little thing
that you would put in the insole of certain shoes
and it would measure your stride length
and all the metrics about running
and it would report it to your iPod
because it had a little 30-pin connector thing
you could put into your iPod.
It was the most clunky, kludgy thing ever.
But as that evolved into the FuelBand
and then as the FuelBand evolved into apps on your iPhone,
Nike started really building a way to have a relationship with their customers directly,
and not just through their products, but with this sort of suite of services.
And 2006, and then again in like 2013, 14, they had sort of a new strategy start.
There's really these clear moments in time where
the company changed its DNA. And I go all the way back to 2006 on the technology one. It also
completely changed their acquisition strategy. Because up until then, they had been acquiring
brands. They bought Converse, they had bought Starter. Starter was going to kind of be their
like Walmart brand. Oh, that's right. Cole Haan. Cole Haan.
Yeah.
And I think this sort of aha moment happened where they realized, actually, what we want
to be doing is pouring everything into the flywheel of the Nike brand.
So they divested a bunch of stuff, but they started acquiring capabilities from a bunch
of these other companies to help them make this tech migration.
It's like a two-decade
thing where they have these two different strategies that are happening at the same time.
One is the digitization. And to give you a stat on how impressive that is, across the four mobile
apps that Nike operates today, they have 500 million users a quarter who are now using Nike
digital apps, from their e-commerce app to their
running app. Run club, training club, sneakers. And the Nike mobile store. Huge user base. All
sort of started at this moment in time where they realized, A, we should be in technology,
and B, we should be making acquisitions not of other brands, but of technologies that we can
integrate to help
us extend our brand and participate more in the lives of our customers. The other thing,
and this is a little bit later, this is more of the 2013-14 era, they pull the trigger on this
big strategy shift away from what Phil Knight had sort of pioneered with the retail relationships to
go direct. And Nike started to realize in this new era,
this internet era, this global era,
where you have to be at scale to execute certain strategies,
they're going to be the player at scale
that can execute a direct strategy,
that can operate Nike.com to sell shoes directly to customers,
that can operate retail stores and all these different places
to go directly to customers.
And they're not all the way there.
And I think there's a lot of, like, we'll talk in their sort of bare-bull case about
where they are in that transition and how successful it will be.
But there is this tipping point where a brand becomes the scale player.
Like, think about Disney in media.
They've become the scale player.
They can run a different playbook and go directly to customers in a way where other places that make content need to
integrate with the existing distribution channels. Disney can make a 10, 15-year transition,
especially with the right technology to go direct. Nike's basically betting that they're also one of
these hero brands that can run that playbook. For context, today Nike is, what, more than twice the size of Adidas, who is more than
three times, I think, the size of the number three player, which is Skechers, maybe?
Yep.
It's super power law distributed.
The other aspect of that is personalization.
Nike, I actually think, is really at the forefront of apparel personalization with what started as
Nike ID and now is I think called Nike by me. But anybody can make their own Nike shoes in their own
colors with their own designs on them. To be able to do that at scale with their customer base and
produce the standard lines that requires a level of scale economies that nobody else can really match.
Okay, so that's like the 2014 era
where they really start to execute
this digital and direct migration.
Around this time,
you have this very old idea of sneakerheads
starting to take root in a big way,
this huge growth category
where the secondary market for shoes, in most
situations, you would think like used shoes are worthless. And like, I'm being tongue-in-cheek
here because most, you know, secondary market shoes are not used. Well, until recently,
any mainstream person would have said, of course, to that statement. Right. But there became, David, to your point
about Jordan and Nike creating culture
and participating in cultural movements
and changing the way that people move around in the world
and having a sneaker as a thing that defines you
rather than a sneaker as a thing you throw on
for the tennis court,
but you wear proper shoes anytime you go somewhere else.
They really have figured out how to reach an audience
and tap into their identity
in a way that the original Phil Knight track shoe thing
never could have dreamed.
And shoes have become this method for self-expression.
And the secondary market is huge.
It's like some estimate $2 billion,
some people estimate $6 billion category.
Keep in mind, all of athletic shoes are, what did I say, 150-ish?
You know, somewhere around there.
So still a tiny fraction compared to the athletic sneaker market broadly.
But who would have thought that used special edition shoes or secondary sales of shoes could possibly be a single-digit billion-dollar ecosystem.
Right. I mean, this is companies like GOAT and StockX, and we'll talk about this more in
analysis, but Nike has made the, I think, very conscious decision not to capture any of that
value. Yeah, I'm fascinated by that. I think they've figured out clever ways to make a bunch
of money on
limited edition sneakers without having to be the marketplace for all the secondary sales.
The other way that Nike potentially could capture this value would be to massively increase their
prices. And this is really interesting. I think this is where Nike is different from the luxury
brands that we've covered, the LVMHs, the Porsches. Porsche makes
tens of thousands of dollars of incremental gross margin with their library wine colors
that you can buy. Nike sells these incredibly limited edition retro and otherwise sneakers,
but they sell them for $150, $200, maybe $300, like not a lot of money.
The instant that they get purchased, you can turn around and sell them on the secondary market for
$5,000, some of these shoes, $10,000, maybe more. That is a very intentional decision by Nike not
to capture that value. And I think the reason they do it is to make all of this work,
to make the dream work
in a way that is applicable
to everybody on the planet
and not just Louis Vuitton's market,
is they have to keep it attainable.
And so they're willing to let that
two, six billion dollars or whatever
go to secondary players,
go to StockX,
in order to keep the dream alive.
It's pretty crazy. I don't think there is anything that I can buy from Nike that costs $500.
Yeah. And yet Nike absolutely produces many items that are worth way more than $500.
Right. And like, it's not even a high number. It's not like, oh, I can't buy something from Nike for $10,000.
Like, I really can't think of a single thing I could possibly purchase for them, even for $500.
Right.
The one product that I know of was the Mags, the Back to the Future shoes that they actually produced.
But those were for Michael J. Fox's charity.
I think they made 50 of them and sold them for $17,000 if I have that
right. But A, that was for charity. B, that was like obviously a stunt. That's not Louis Vuitton.
All right, here's what I can buy for $490. I can get American and National League jerseys for the
All-Star game. And they have some football shoes that cost $300. Curious.
Wow. Crazy.
But the point still stands. They make it up in volume.
Yes. I really can't think of anything else off the top of my head where a company is making such
an obvious and clear choice to give value to other players in the ecosystem. Whether those be
companies or just people who are arbitraging. Yeah. Just like a luxury brand, they have to
market the dream, but their mechanism for capturing value is entirely different.
Yep. Okay. I'm going to move us quickly here through 2018 to today so we can analyze the business in its current state.
So in 2018, something pretty special happened. They pulled the trigger on a Wyden & Kennedy ad
with Colin Kaepernick about standing for something.
The Dream Crazy ad?
Yep. The text of which obviously was just Colin Kaepernick's face and says,
believe in something even if it means sacrificing everything.
They accompanied it with a commercial.
It launched online.
Kaepernick tweeted it.
Then they did these big billboards in every major city.
I remember the first time I saw it and I was like, whoa.
Nike executed perfectly
on exactly what they were trying to do here.
It strikes you emotionally,
much like many of the Nike commercials. It was at a particular moment in time
where they saw an opportunity to do something that they felt was right and become the center
of media conversation for months. This was the advertisement of the year. And in fact,
I know that when they launched this, they actually scrapped their plans for the the advertisement of the year. And in fact, I know that when they launched this,
they actually scrapped their plans
for the whole rest of the year
for a whole bunch of ad campaigns
that were already ready for a different way
that they were going to do
the 30th anniversary relaunch of Just Do It,
and instead made everything in this new tone.
This Kaepernick ad struck such an incredible chord
and made a lot of people super angry
on the sort of other side of the political aisle
of this particular issue that Nike was supporting
that like it entirely changed Nike's media plan
in every geography for every sport
for the rest of the year.
Yeah, this was two years before Black Lives Matter
became a really big thing with George Floyd.
This actually was like a big risk.
If this had been done two years later,
it would have played out very differently.
It would have been way less of a risk.
They would have been just like every other company.
Just like everyone else, yeah.
And it's quite illustrative
that we aren't really talking about
anything that Kaepernick did.
We just assume that the whole audience
has seen this ad,
understands the power of this ad.
That says a lot about the ad itself, the meta context around how we're talking about it.
I do think this is a good place to open up what is Nike's media strategy, because it's very clear,
especially over the last 20 years, that they pick a social issue that they feel strongly about,
and they drive a truck through it in the American media
market and say, hey, we want to prioritize this, and we want to say we stand for this,
and we want to say we stand for and support something. And there's a cynical way to take
that, which is like, they've done the analysis, and they believe that in doing this, they're
going to build more love than they're going to piss people off from, you know, those people
are worth losing because we prefer these people instead, and we think these people's disposable income is high enough, or there's enough of them, or
whatever. I actually don't think that's the way that it operates. I think it is like an executive
and creative gut feel, this is a set of values we feel are right, and we're going to continue to bet
the company on the people that identify with that set of values are a great customer segment for us,
and we can grow within it. I really do think it's quite touchy-feely. Yep. And this is also, you know,
back to the Kaepernick ad, this is, to my mind, the pinnacle of the brand halo element of this.
Kaepernick played football, not an important sport for Nike in terms of shoe sales,
hadn't played in several years.
That's right.
It wasn't about football.
He was sitting there on the Nike roster getting paid.
There was a bunch of press about how they were thinking about actually cutting him.
And then someone internally was like,
whoa, what are you thinking?
This is a huge opportunity for us.
But it's hard to be a Nike athlete when you're no longer a professional athlete.
Yeah.
This is the ultimate example for me of the ad, the sponsorship, the campaign.
It's not about the shoes.
It's about the halo.
Yeah.
Despite that going really well for them in 2018, they did just have a whole bunch of
other controversies.
Big Me Too issues at the executive level, the person that everyone
thought was going to be the CEO and next after Mark Parker and many of his people around him
were shown the exit. There was the whole Oregon project, that's their competitive running group,
with doping and all the alleged abuse going on there. So there's these sort of like,
coming out of 2019, they really did kind of just need to like
clean things up and right the ship. And it was very fortunate that while all of this was going on,
their big competitors were all kind of screwing up. And especially going into COVID, like none
of their competitors figured it out. There's these smaller shoe brands and you look at On or Hoka or
Brooks. A lot of these niche players have done well in growing,
but Nike hasn't had a formidable scale competitor.
Adidas has just been nothing but mistakes over there
the last few years.
And so Nike has had some of these issues,
but has kind of been fine.
And after they brought in John Donahoe,
they've been able to clean up the organization,
reset for the next chapter,
execute this shift to a direct and digital strategy.
While I think they take a little bit of a breath
and say like, okay, what does Nike in 2030 look like?
And how can we make sure
that we don't sort of stagnate here?
Oh, this is great.
I have so much to say.
Let's officially transition to analysis and
do power, and then you can update us on the business today as we go. Great. So, okay, power.
For new listeners, as part of the analysis on every episode, we do a segment called Power,
which is based on Hamilton Helmer's incredible business strategy book, Seven Powers. Yep,
which is basically, what is it that enables a business to achieve persistent differential returns and be more profitable than their closest competitor on a durable basis? So, David,
I think there is a trap laid for us on this episode, but I'm curious.
Oh.
You said you had a transition to power, so I'm curious where you were going.
Okay. So, So obviously we're
going to talk about brand here in a minute, but scale economies are written all over this company
in this episode for me. And this is the clearest thing in my mind that makes this industry and Nike's position and strategy within it so
different from, say, an LVMH or a Porsche or any of the others. I mean, I guess Porsche has scale
economies. But if you look at the sneaker industry, we talked about this a minute ago,
it's such a power law. There's Nike, there's Adidas that's half their size, and then the third place player is well less than half of Adidas' size.
Yes.
After that is Skechers, then Puma, then Asics, Converse, Under Armour,
but like massively declining market share curve.
Yep.
Okay.
Now compare that to the rest of the apparel industry.
It's wild how different it is, right? Think about fashion,
think about clothes, think about shirts, think about pants, think about jackets, think about
whatever. No other corner of the apparel industry looks like this in that there are two, three,
four companies that make a huge share of all of the sneakers that the world wears.
That's wild.
It's totally wild.
It also is massively scale economies driven because the way that you acquire customers
and retain customers is with this brand halo of sponsoring these big athletes
and putting on these large, very expensive
branded events and competitions.
And small companies can't do that.
The primary way that you get someone
to be a 20-year customer of Nike
is to go and spend money
on the biggest athletes in the world.
And the whole game, just like Netflix,
is Nike's acquiring content.
Nike is acquiring the LeBrons of the world
to be Nike athletes.
And the LeBrons of the world are going to go
where there's the most dollars flowing to them.
And who can give them the most dollars?
The people with the biggest customer bases. It's not just that Nike is paying LeBron a check every year for a lot of money like Converse
was back in the day. It's not like, oh, here's your $100,000 check, right? There's alignment
and an incentive to be part of the biggest machine. So like the Kobe situation is so
illustrative of this, right? Kobe was with
Adidas. Yeah, maybe the Kobe 2 sucked. Like, I don't know. And he didn't like the shoe. I doubt
that was the issue. I think the issue was what Nike could do for Kobe and thus what Kobe could
participate in was exponentially higher than even what Adidas could do. And that is huge power.
Yeah, it's fascinating.
I mean, the game is figure out how to have the most customers
that you can sell apparel to,
and then you get to buy the biggest billboards.
And you get to align interests with the biggest billboards.
It's a content game on the customer acquisition side.
And you can make the best commercials that are the most inspiring.
I mean, that, I guess, doesn't take as many dollars. You know, you can produce an incredible
commercial for $100,000, but the talent in it is going to cost you millions. The Super Bowl slot
is going to cost you millions. I think a lot of Nike's power on a go-forward basis is totally
the scale economy stuff.
Yep, totally agree.
And they had lots of counter-positioning in the old days.
Like, the whole Jordan thing was a pure counter-positioning play.
Yes, in that the other companies couldn't do it because Magic and Bird would never tolerate
Jordan getting a fundamentally much better deal.
Correct. Yeah, they had too much to lose.
Yep.
So, Brand, I think this is a trap on this episode.
I think Nike is a brand.
First and foremost, what they do is build this incredible brand, sell the dream, support
athletes, inspire people. But when you literally understand how Hamilton defines brand power,
and the perfect example is the Tiffany ring. You get a Tiffany ring versus an unbranded
diamond ring of the exact same caliber. You're probably paying $10,000 to $30,000 more for the Tiffany engagement ring. And there's a pureness to that brand premium concept.
Does Nike really have a brand premium?
Or is it the athletes that have the brand
and Nike's scale economies let them buy the athletes' brands?
Right, as Trent Griffin would put it,
wholesale transfer pricing,
where actually the athletes are the ones
that sort of hold the power and Nike's happy to pay up for it and pass through all the profit pool to the
pinnacle athletes. Unquestionably, that was the case in 1984 with Michael Jordan. And then again
in 1987, 88, when they renegotiated the deal. Right. But let's look at an Air Force One or a
Dunk, you know, the Dunk Lowe's that everyone's wearing right now. They're not really generating pricing power on that. Maybe off of something purely unbranded, but off of Adidas, people are more likely to buy the Dunk Low SB than whatever the Adidas equivalent is. But the prices are pretty equivalent.
Yeah, they're not paying more for them.
Right. Now, maybe again, that's a
intentional choice by Nike. But in this category, I do think, yeah, if the Dunks cost more than the
Adidas Sheltos, I don't know, maybe Sheltos would be popular right now.
Right. For whatever reason, Nike has either decided not to or can't raise the prices where
their brand differentiates them.
And I think it's fascinating.
The Nike running shoes that I buy that are, what, $160, $180,
the equivalent Adidas pair is $160, $180.
Same with the equivalent New Balance pair.
And so if you assume that they do have brand power,
Nike's making a conscious choice not to capture that value in making all those
shoes more expensive than competitors. Yeah. But I do think, despite you saying
the trap, and I think there is a big trap in overestimating brand value of Nike,
it does definitely have brand value and brand power. Yeah. It shows up in a different way.
It shows up not in pricing. It shows up in a different way. It shows up not in pricing.
It shows up in the fact that
I often don't look at a competitor.
I will only go buy the Nike thing.
Yep.
My thought exercise on this,
which is a little different
than my usual brand power thought exercise,
which is, can you kill it?
Can you intentionally kill Nike?
No, you can't.
It can't die.
It will be with us in 100 years.
Ooh, that's quite a take. Oh, you don't think It can't die. It will be with us in a hundred years. Ooh, that's quite a take.
Oh, you don't think Nike's going to be here in a hundred years?
I think you could totally kill Nike in the next 30 if you wanted to.
I also don't like your premise. I disagree with your Dior thing, that the really good brands or
the way you can tell if something's luxury or a durable brand is like if you couldn't kill it if
you tried. I think that's too squishy. Okay, fair enough. I have something
way less squishy for you here though. Okay. I think, I was talking with Scott Reams about this,
I have no data on this whatsoever, but I don't think it is a controversial statement to say
that the Swoosh logo is tattooed on more bodies around the globe than any other company logo.
I'm sure that's the case.
It has to be the case. So if that's not brand power right there,
I know it doesn't fit Hamilton's definition.
Yeah, it's a sleight of hand. What Nike is first and foremost is a brand. What the entity is,
is a brand because they don't make sneakers, which we'll talk about in a second
here. They don't seem to charge more than their competitors. I'm literally looking at Adidas
gross profit margins are on average higher than Nike's. Nike's current rolling last four quarter
gross profit margin is 44%. Adidas is 46%. And Adidas, every single quarter for the last 10 years, has had a higher gross margin.
What is going on here?
Why isn't Nike, with a better brand than anyone else in their space and one of the hero brands in the entire world, they don't seem to be getting a special Nike markup?
This is, again, and this is purely conjecture, I do think this is an intentional decision on Nike's part. I think they absolutely could sell 500, 1,000, 5,000, $10,000 Nike items.
They absolutely could.
And they choose not to, I think, because if they did that...
Well, one thing we didn't talk about.
So Nike announced a few years ago that their whole marketing strategy was going to be reoriented
around, I think, 12 cities in the world.
And they were going to focus everything they did from a marketing standpoint on thinking
about what it would mean to be interesting in those cities.
So what's behind that?
And the cities are like New York, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Shanghai, Rio, Paris, etc. And I think what's behind that is Nike needs to be accessible to the tastemakers in those cities. And that doesn't mean wealthy people. That means people on the streets. That means young people. That means people who can't afford $5,000 items
but want to be participating in the pinnacle of Nike.
I'm not talking about $5,000 items.
I'm talking about charging $200 instead of $180
because there's a swoosh on it
when the market price for those shoes seems to be $180
no matter who makes them.
Why don't they do that?
Is it because of what it says
right at the top of their IR website,
which is Nike Inc. is a growth company
and they care more about growth
than harvesting profit dollars?
It could be.
I think the thing that is so confounding here
is the secondary markets. There is no question that
the value of many Nike items is well above their selling price. Right. And I don't think that's
the case for Adidas. Maybe for some items, but I doubt as many as Nike. Yeah, I don't know. I don't
have a clear answer here. I think my best answer is they want the most swooshes out there
in the world. And there's some sweet spot where they're willing to trade off profit dollars for
that, for the sort of continued brand presence where the swoosh feels like a ubiquitous thing
and a brand people celebrate and are excited about, and they just want it reinforced on
everyone everywhere. So they're willing to give margin dollars for that. Ooh, maybe this actually all comes back to scale economies
because it's kind of the same thing with Amazon, right? Or Netflix. For a given price,
Netflix can offer more value or could in the past offer more value than anyone else. Amazon
with Prime can offer way more value than anybody else.
This is the scale economy play.
Yeah.
I don't think the rest of the powers are particularly worth talking about.
The most interesting thing is there's not any switching costs.
There's not any network economies.
There's not a cornered resource.
I frequently switch shoe brands all the time.
And that would be like one of the things
that I'm least excited about about any shoe or apparel company is, unlike tech businesses,
there's no potential for any form of lock-in. And there's no potential for really any form
of network effects. Like, come on, how am I going to benefit from other people wearing
Nikes? Maybe like in the Nike Run app, being able to share stuff with my friends who also
have the Nike Run app, but it's thin. That's not how they make their money.
Yep. Agreed.
So interestingly, I guess what I would conclude on Power is Nike is first and foremost a brand that from a Seven Powers perspective, most leverages scale economies to get their outsized profitability.
Totally agree with that. Nice. Okay, I will catch us up now and give us the numbers on the business today and then we
can go into playbook. So Nike is at absolutely astonishing scale. They are a $51 billion revenue
business growing 10% year over year. As I mentioned at the top of the show, they're the largest
apparel company in the world except for the luxury category. LVMH and Hermes got them beat.
Nike's sales to women alone are bigger than all of Lululemon's revenue.
Wow.
Take that in for a minute.
That's shocking.
I feel like that's an illustrative stat. And Nike has really lagged in developing products for women.
That's exactly what I was going to say.
It's just $8.6 billion of their $50 billion of revenue.
Wow.
It's like every corner of Nike is bigger than the brand that you associate with that space.
You know?
Yep.
The Nike brand does $49 billion.
So there's some other revenue in there, Converse, and I think
there's some other catch-all. But basically, there's Nike and Converse, and Nike includes
Jordan. So I mentioned earlier this shift to direct that Nike has been in the midst of for
basically like a 10-year journey. About 60% is still wholesale, is still sold through retailers. And impressively, 40% of this
very large business, this $50 billion revenue business, is now done selling products directly
to consumers, either in stores or on their website. I can't imagine how difficult that
transition is to make when you forge these long partnerships with retailers. Come back to that in a second.
Their gross margin profile, 44%.
So it's sort of interesting looking.
Historically, David, we've been a tech podcast,
and we've looked at lots of software businesses
that have these 70%, 80% gross margin businesses.
You know, Nike has real costs,
as you would expect with materials, labor, logistics, cost of storing all this inventory.
44%? Not bad.
Let's just remember luxury.
LVMH is a 68% gross margin business.
Hermes is a 71% gross margin business.
So Nike is better than a car company, but it ain't no luxury.
So Nike does $6.4 billion in operating income,
so that's their income before taxes,
12.5% operating margin.
So that's sort of what you should think about
their sort of take-home.
Not a software company.
Yeah, lots of costs involved in this business.
They have $8.5 billion sitting in inventory,
which even for Nike is high.
That's a point we'll revisit in our analysis here. Unlike the Nike of old, they also, in addition to that inventory, have $10.7 billion
in cash and similar equivalents. So the company is no longer constrained by how much capital they
have available to them.
While it's been a growth company, they kind of don't know what to do with the cash. It's sort of this interesting question of, well, the way they started is that they could use 100% of their
cash all the time to go buy more inventory and reinvest that in the business. And that was true
for like a couple of decades. They've now had 30 consecutive quarters
of increasing dividend payouts.
So it's a dividend stock with 11 billion of cash on hand
in addition to continually paying these dividends.
It's funny, this doesn't jibe for me
with the statement on the investor relations page,
Nike is a growth company.
I mean, I guess 10% growth at their scale is impressive.
35% growth in the Jordan brand is very impressive.
So you might think it seems like they could reinvest more in the business to grow faster.
They already spend $4 billion a year on demand creation.
And I assume that's like their sports marketing budget.
I think the wording on the financial statement is interesting too.
They literally look at it as we're basically going out and buying media to create demand for our products. Yep. I mean, that's 100% what it is.
Yes. Like we were saying, it's not really that different than Netflix acquiring or producing
content for Netflix. Right. They just monetize in a different way. Yep. Footwear is almost 3x the
apparel business on a revenue basis.
So at least by revenue,
footwear is still their bread and butter.
And in part, it's just selling sneakers
to people that go wear sneakers every day
and wear them out once or twice a year
and then need to go buy some more sneakers.
And that's like most people in the world.
It's a pretty incredible market
that they now get to address,
you know, $150 billion athletic footwear market.
It's crazy.
When you look at this pretty interesting thing that they list,
which is their wholesale equivalent revenue breakdown,
which is basically saying, yeah, we sell some of this direct,
but we want to put apples to apples and make these unit sales sort of adjusted
as if they were all sold through our wholesale channel.
Men's is 51%.
Women's is 21%.
Kids is 12%.
And the Jordan brand, broken out separately,
like all of this excludes Jordan.
The Jordan brand is the $6.6 billion business
that makes up the other 16% of that pie chart.
Holy God.
Yeah.
Men's inclusive of Jordan, if you just assume Jordan is three
quarters men, that means that they're selling 64% of their product to men. So remember when I said
at IPO, they sell sneakers to men? It's like kind of the same business as it was, but a super
different business than it was at the same time. Yes. In some sports specifically, like just to dive into
one example, they have a near monopoly in basketball shoes. Nike and the Air Jordan brand's
share of performance basketball was 86%. And the stat's a few years old. It was right before the
pandemic. But the dominance was even more prevalent in the lifestyle basketball category, where they have 96% share.
I have to wonder, the other shoe companies who are still doing big deals in the NBA,
let's take Under Armour and Steph Curry here in San Francisco.
Like, what are they doing?
Name another Under Armour athlete.
I mean, they exist, but I don't think I could, right?
Like, right?
Like, why?
And obviously it's worth it to Steph.
Steph could sign with Nike tomorrow,
but Under Armour is just paying him a boatload of cash.
And I think also gave him tons of equity in the company and whatnot.
But like, why?
I mean, I just think it's a bad move for Under Armour.
I think this is the classic thing
that we've talked about in 11 different industries
of don't get caught in the middle
in the age of the internet.
It's so obvious in media. it's becoming obvious in universities,
but be the New York Times or be acquired, but don't be the Cleveland Plain Dealer,
or be Disney or be Doug DeMuro. Or in this world, be Brooks or be Nike.
Right. But don't be Under Armour, who's not a platform brand. They don't have the size and scale and everything that accrues to a Nike,
but they're trying to run a mini Nike playbook,
and they need to run a completely different playbook.
Yeah, totally agree.
So Nike is just leaning into this in a big way. They're now the official uniform supplier of the MLB, the NFL, and the NBA,
and they're throwing huge dollars. Like,
the NFL deal alone is something like a $200 million a year deal. And David, you were telling
me Nike doesn't even get to sell the jerseys to customers. It's literally just to get the swoosh
on the game day jerseys. This is absolutely fascinating and blew my mind when I talked to a few people
in the industry about this. So yes, the official jerseys, let's take the NBA for example. Nike
replaced Adidas a few years back as the official jersey maker of the NBA. When most NBA jerseys are sold to buyers who pay money for them, aka fans, not the players.
Most of those are replica jerseys, which I'd heard that term before and I never thought about
what it meant. Most of those are made by Fanatics, which has run an incredibly interesting playbook
in the sports world and the sports marketing world over the past few years, they are replicas made and sold by Fanatics in
conjunction with the teams of the jerseys that the players wear. Nike pays to make the jerseys
that the players wear. It is a billboard. It is a sponsorship. That is what they are paying for.
But that's probably not what you're going to buy. You're going to buy a replica
from the team store that is made by Fanatics that has the Nike swoosh on it.
Which in many ways, that's part of why Nike is willing to pay to sponsor the NBA is because the replica jerseys get more swooshes out there in the world, even if it's not on things that they sell.
It's a billboard, even if it's not on things that they make.
Right. That's wild.
It's totally wild.
You would think the value chain would flow the other way
where you would make money from the jerseys sold
because you are an apparel company,
but instead you're paying to put your swoosh on jerseys made by other people.
One final thought on this athletic shoe market being $130 billion market.
I mean, Nike totally participated in a world change and helped
to change the world that we all wear sneakers all day. What an insane market to address that
there are 14 billion feet in the world and we all wear out the shoes. It's just a thing we need to
just keep replacing. What a fantastic thing to get to sell. It really is surprising to me that they
haven't quite figured out price discrimination. With the exception of some of these very specialized shoes, which I'm probably
not going to go buy. I'm just not a sneaker head. So I'm not going to go buy any of this limited
edition color, this, that, and the other thing, or something I have to keep in a closet in a bag.
It's not my bag. But so if you exempt away that part of the market, there's probably some shoes that I should
and would pay $500 for,
and yet those shoes don't seem to exist.
And that's very surprising to me.
Yep.
Okay, so those are the numbers on the business today.
You want to go to playbook?
Let's do it.
Okay, playbook.
The first one, I know I've said it a few times
on this episode,
I totally want to ingrain it in the ears of listeners where Nike will come up with the most creative, clever way to win. And even if it's
breaking a little bit of a rule, it's fine. The best illustration of this is breaking two. Did
you watch that, David? Oh, yeah. So good. It was compelling. Unbelievably compelling. But they said,
what are all the rules to competitive running? If you're going to have a pacer on a run with you, it needs to be the same pacer the whole time
so that you can't cheat and rotate in pacers. You can't wear certain types of shoes that
have ill-defined rules. And so Nike stages this event with their shoes that provably make you
4% faster than you've ever been before.
And they drive a Tesla with a laser and a whole bunch of pacers around this guy.
And they're like, you know what?
We're going to make this big media spectacle
out of this guy setting the world record
and breaking the two-hour marathon time.
And he came close,
and it was an unbelievably entertaining event to watch.
And what they said was,
we don't care if this is legal or not in competition,
we're just doing a stunt.
You know, and you guys can debate afterwards
if this actually set the world record
for the marathon time or not.
And I just thought it was like,
there's nothing more perfectly Nike
than saying like, well, those rules are like quite cute,
but Nike is a growth company.
But Nike is a growth company.
That's the ultimate non sequitur. I hope that becomes a meme, but Nike is a growth company. But Nike is a growth company. That's the ultimate non sequitur.
I hope that becomes a meme. But Nike is a growth company. It's actually better if you open it on
mobile because the sub headline goes away. So it's literally just a black and white picture
of Serena Williams. It says Nike Inc is a growth company. The first time I opened it on my phone,
I was like, that is a okay. All right. I'm making that pretty clear. So I don't know. I think you
sort of see some of that in the best DNA of Nike
and in the crappy DNA of Nike, like the Oregon Project stuff.
So it's important to understand that to understand the company.
Hey, Ben, break the rules, fight the law.
That's right.
Another big one is the things that are your very strength
can go too far and become your weakness.
And they totally pioneered outsourced manufacturing
in Asia, which is also why they got hit so hard and deserve to get hit so hard when that became
an issue. I always think everyone should always just be aware in your business that your greatest
strength is also your greatest weakness. And you just have to factor it in. You just have to know.
It was weird to me how wildly caught off guard they
were by like, oh, well, we're not a shoe company. Come on. Can't say that. Yeah. On the note of not
a shoe company, there's a great analogy here to TSMC. And in fact, there's a great analogy here
to the NVIDIA and Qualcomm's of the world and Nike. Nike is a fabulous shoe company.
Yes, yes.
I think that is ultimately the answer to,
is Nike a shoe company?
Sure.
This is our semiconductor episode this season.
They're a fabulous shoe company.
Yes.
And unlike TSMC,
semiconductor manufacturing is wildly differentiated.
Shoe manufacturing,
there's like two or three really big ones
that Nike works
with. They're unbelievably prescriptive. They source all the materials. They do lots of audits,
stuff like that. But it runs quite differently than their apparel business, which has like
thousands of manufacturers that they work with, which are all custom for all the different
fabrics and stuff that they need to make. And so in some ways, it's like the fabless semiconductor industry,
but unlike semiconductors,
the manufacturing isn't as CapEx intensive to start
and there's not as much process power in it.
So you actually do have this highly fragmented
foundry equivalent,
like manufacturing ecosystem
of people who can make your stuff.
To the scale economies power question, to the extent in footwear that there are limited
numbers of factory operators that are the big ones that are fully audited that you want to work with,
being the scale player that can dominate the capacity in those factories is a huge advantage.
Yep, that's exactly right.
While we're on manufacturing,
it's sort of a funny note.
Nike manufactures zero shoes,
but they manufacture 100%
of the nitrogen-filled little airbags.
They do it in Oregon because that's trade secret,
and then they ship those over
to their Asian manufacturing facilities
to put them in the shoes. Do they do that with any of the other technology like Flyknit or React? I don't
know. I don't think so on Flyknit. I don't know if you're going to make the Flyknit in the US,
you may as well assemble it. Yeah, I would assume not. So I also think it's one of these interesting
things where like Nike gets hit. Basically all shoes are made the same way. There's some companies
that like to claim credit for, oh my gosh, this one's made in the US. Well,
part of it's assembled in the US, but basically everyone either makes the whole shoe or the upper
outside the US. And I think New Balance is a US brand, but it's not, to my understanding,
it's not all made here. It's designed by Apple in California. Right. The other huge theme that I
think is important to take away here is for the first 15 years of Nike, it was a story of leverage.
Every single point along the way up until 1981, they took the highest leveraged route they possibly
could. The whole thing was betting the
farm on top of betting the farm. And we are telling Nike because it is the survivorship
bias story. And there are many that would have failed along the way because at any given point,
they would have gotten slightly ahead of their skis and the 100% debt to assets ratio would
have caught up with them and then poof, they go out of business. And Phil Knight even put up he and Penny's house to guarantee a loan. If it came down,
it all would have come down. There's no slack in the system at all.
It even continued through to the Jordan story, right? Nobody else was going to do that deal.
Yep, exactly. So Phil Knight basically never took on any equity investors. And so he
took no dilution. He and his management team and Bill Bowerman owned 56% at IPO, him owning 46%
because he just kept betting the farm all on debt and basically had no buffer at all.
So what that means is on IPO day, he was worth $178 million, and today he's worth
about $40 billion. When you own 46% of your company at IPO, and it goes on to become a top 50 company
in the world, that is how you become the 25th richest person in the world. He shot the moon,
and he kept ownership the whole way. Yep. Okay, so we talked a lot about this brand halo idea. I want to put a specific
fine point on what the strategy is. They create pinnacle products for athletes. I think oftentimes
without even thinking about how does this translate to something the ordinary person
could buy or wear, the athletes find their way to it either through a brand deal nowadays or
in the early days, you know, through their local running shop who has something cool and exclusive.
You build brand with that niche athletic community by being obsessed with that particular athlete's
journey and designing products for them and customizing experiences for them, that brand then seeps out into the broader consciousness,
either through paid media
or through just organic word of mouth
that Nike stands with athletes.
They're obsessed with it.
They make the experience of being an athlete
the best thing possible.
And then they extend.
And when I say they extend,
they figure out what products that need to make
that fit into the universe of the consumer psyche of how could I be like that dream that I'm
watching? How can I participate in this feat of athleticism and show that this is like me too?
And the hardest thing is figuring out how to extend that audience and make products for them to buy without compromising
that step one, that belief that you make pinnacle products. And what Nike has been able to do and
thread that needle and figure out how to make the $15 t-shirt that you get at Dick's Sporting
Goods with the swoosh on it, and also convince me that the very best shoes to run in is the,
you know, Nike Vaporfly, Next Percent, whatever, whatever. Again, just like our LVMH episode,
it's amazing that they can make a little wallet clutch for a credit card and an ID
and a $200,000 handbag. Yeah. Only thing I would add to that is just reiterate what
kind of has hit me through doing the research in this episode is that athletes are Netflix shows.
Yeah, I didn't think of that until we were actually recording here.
And these days, especially in the beginning, it was athletes are billboards and Netflix shows in that, you know, on SportsCenter or whatever, like you're going to see the swoosh.
Now with social media and the modern world,
it literally is a Netflix show.
People are following, you name it,
Patrick Mahomes, Serena Williams.
They have a following who are following their lives
like a reality TV show.
You want to hear an insane quote
that dates all the way back to 1983?
Rob Strasser wrote this in an internal memo.
Individual athletes, even more than teams, will be the heroes.
Symbols, more and more of what real people can't do anymore, risk and win.
Yes.
I see your Rob Strasser quote, and I will one-up you a Phil Knight quote.
Give it to me.
This is actually about Phil Knight quote. Give it to me.
This is actually about Phil Knight in Just Do It.
Around the time Michael Jordan became a Nike guy,
Phil Knight had finally begun to apply in full measure his hunch that if the general public
could be helped to imagine great athletes
as he imagined them,
as having implications of the very best
that the human spirit had to offer, then those
athletes would become like the heroes of old, the heroes in books, and people would come
to those heroes and listen to what they had to say.
Yes, I love it.
Side with the athletes, sell the dream, people will buy products.
Yes.
Interestingly enough, too, in this Rob Strasser quote,
where he says individual athletes even more than the teams, this was the big takeaway from our NBA
episode that is about marketing the athletes, not marketing the teams. Now, what's really
interesting, since we did the NFL episode earlier this year after doing the NBA episode,
I've really changed my thought on this. The NFL is a better
business as a league than the NBA. No question in my mind. But the amount of value created out of
the leagues, I think more value is created out of the NBA. The NFL just captures way more value and thus is the more valuable league but this Nike episode is
totally solidified for me the value coming out of the NBA Jordan Kobe LeBron goes on and on Zion
Wemby Victor Wem and Maya the new phenom coming out of France that was the number one pick of
the Spurs he's already a Nike athlete. Fascinating.
And basketball, again, because it directly translates to those are the shoes that people
can buy. Whether they buy that model or a different model, they are buying those shoes.
They're not buying football cleats. And it's the face of the person. It's not behind a helmet. It's
like, they're the heroes. Right. Yeah. Basket basketball is quite helpful in that there's a reason to buy those shoes just to wear
them around. You don't have to invent a new product for people to buy to participate in
the brand story like you do with football. I mean, it's funny because it's the Gatorade line,
not the Nike line about Michael Jordan, but be like Mike. If you want to be like Mike,
it's really easy. You just buy the shoes. If you want to be like Mike, it's really easy. You just buy the shoes.
If you want to be like Patrick Mahomes,
it's a little harder.
Right, I don't have any pads.
I don't have a helmet.
I have nothing in common with Pat Mahomes.
No shoes will change that.
Yep.
I have one that I've been trying to think on.
And at one point in the research, I wrote down,
when you sell commodities, brand matters a lot.
Is Nike differentiating a commodity with their brand, or are they not in the commodity business? Well, this gets to your question at the start of the episode.
This is the crux of the question. I think there's two answers. The Prestige models,
the Jordans, the Retros, the Vaporfly, what have you.
The prestige $150 plus Nike models.
I don't think those are commodities.
I think those are products.
Nike also sells a lot of $50, $60, $70 pairs of shoes.
Those are probably commodities that are helped by the brand Halo.
Yeah, bifurcating it like that does make sense.
Someone told me that in many years,
the Monarch has been their best-selling shoe,
which is this crazy high-margin dad barbecue shoe
that no athlete has ever worn for anything.
Everyone should just Google Nike Monarchs,
and you're like, oh yeah, no, my parents wore that.
I don't know, it's like the ultimate barbecue shoe.
And that's kind of what America buys.
And so they've sold enormous volumes of this thing.
I'm like one more kid away from becoming a Nike Monarch customer.
Ironically, it's actually caught on with Gen Z.
And so there's this weird thing now where people are wearing Monarchs, ironically.
So the Monarchs are objectively a commodity product,
and they're super differentiated by having the Nike brand on them.
Whereas the Vaporfly,
for the two years that it came out,
the next percent thing
that the Breaking 2 Marathon got ran in,
it was like by far the best running shoe
on the market for two whole years.
That is actual R&D product
that differentiates itself.
So Phil Knight has the final word on this.
In an interview,
maybe eight, 10 years ago,
he said, when directly asked the question,
are you a product company or a marketing company?
We're a marketing company
and the product is our most important marketing tool.
I disagree.
I think the athletes are your most important marketing tool.
I think the product is a monetization method
for the marketing that you do through athletes.
But if you admit that,
then you're saying that we don't have differentiation
in our product.
But I do think it's quite telling
that they started distributing someone else's product.
And yeah, they do lots of R&D.
But at the end of the day,
they succeed because they have built
the best brand in the world,
the most amazing distribution in the world,
and the most tear-jerking marketing that anyone ever watches.
And they have a 30-year enduring brand.
For 30 more years, Nike will be, I can't predict after that,
but Nike will be a brand that people look up to and are inspired by.
Yeah, totally agree.
And it's interesting, even like telling a little bit of the
athlete story along the way here too.
Even that story of the athlete story along the way here too.
Even that story of the product is what's important.
That's kind of part of the myth of the marketing of the brand with the athletes, right?
You know, the Jordan 2, the Jordan 3.
Like, yeah, the Jordan 2 sucked.
Sure.
Like everything I said, probably true.
I think MJ probably really believes that, as do many people.
On the other hand, it's also a really convenient story.
Or the Kobe story of, oh, Kobe's Adidas shoes sucked.
Sure.
Makes for a really good story for the soap opera that is The Athlete's Life that is the Netflix show that they're selling.
Right.
Being a soap opera keeps them in the spotlight
and keeps the opportunity to have more impact with sponsor eyeballs.
Yep.
This whole sponsor celebrity thing is both a asset if you do it well and a massive liability
if you do it wrong.
Nike's strategy has very clearly been celebrate athletes.
Adidas has had this strategy that seems to be like celebrate eyeballs, where they'll
sponsor anyone with attention.
It's rappers, it's musicians.
Oh boy.
It's some athletes, it's celebrities, it's...
Do we want to talk about Kanye?
Well, this is quite interesting.
So I think Nike was smart.
I think they legitimately premeditated,
ooh, we don't want to be associated with this person.
And so they drove a really hard bargain.
And notoriously in 2015, Kanye walked away from Nike
and said, they refuse to give me creative control.
I think Nike didn't see exactly
what was coming with Kanye,
but I do think they realized,
hmm, our entire brand is built on celebrating athletes
and while we should be in business with celebrities
in some way, shape and form,
I mean, there's these great old stories of Rob Strasser
making sure that movie stars were wearing Nikes
and driving around Hollywood.
We're here to celebrate athletes and stand by athletes. And like, we would stand by
Tiger Woods. We did in some really trying times in his life where a lot of people turned against him.
Would we stand by Kanye? No, we don't know what to celebrate about him. And so I don't think they
had too much foresight, knew exactly what was going to happen. But I think they've clarified
their strategy that they're athlete
focused. And for anyone who hasn't been paying attention, he blew up Adidas' year. Adidas' net
income has basically evaporated and gone to zero. They used to make over $2 billion a year in profit
and the last four quarters on a rolling basis, they've made less than $100 million. So $2 billion down to $100 million.
And they claim around $500 million of this is the Yeezy write-down.
They posted an actual net loss last quarter.
It is a pretty disastrous situation over there.
And there's a full-out slide in their deck
where they admit, we think we're better than this and we're not.
Oh, I didn't realize it was that bad.
It's bad.
For Adidas. It's really bad. They're in a complete reset year. Well, I think maybe part of this,
what has happened is Nike can participate in getting their billboards in these other aspects
of popular culture, music being the biggest example of it, without having to have rappers be sponsors.
Because how much Nike placement is there in music?
A ton.
How many songs are there about Michael Jordan to this day?
Or LeBron?
Or Zion?
Or Ja Morant?
Or what have you?
Yeah.
There's a lot of different ways to play it,
and Nike seems to
have played the chessboard quite intelligently. Quite intelligently, yeah. All right. So here we
are at the end of analysis, the bear case and the ball case. So there's a bear case that we haven't
talked about, which is Nike's in a weird place when Mark Parker retires. He was supposed to have
a successor. The successor is out for me two reasons and a bunch of other people too. They're theoretically thin on people
who could take the job. They bring in John Donahoe. John was the CEO of ServiceNow, was the CEO of
eBay, and was the CEO of Bain. So not from the sneaker business. But was a board member. He was a board member.
So he knows Nike's history from that level, but different than,
I mean, Mark Parker started as a sneaker designer.
Very different sort of lineage coming in.
He designed the Pegasus, which I think is the longest single running model
with no pauses in Nike's history.
I ran in a Pegasus two days ago.
Oh, that's amazing.
So John comes in and is sort
of this external hire. I get the sense, I'm not sure he'll be a 20-year CEO. I get the sense this
is sort of like figure it out time for Nike, stabilize things, get them set in a good direction,
and then figure out who from the bench is the right next person. I don't know how long it'll
be, but it's just like a vibe that I get from reading stuff. Well, Nike is also so insular. People develop up through the company
and stay there forever. Yeah. So COVID happened around the same time that he's coming into
TakeOver, and they've sort of decided to do this big reorg, where they used to have an org structure
super focused on each sport.
And that meant that it was people's jobs and whole teams' responsibilities to track the
athlete's journey through their experience playing that sport.
And they provided crazy amounts of support to athletes.
And like, here's an example.
At the last Olympics, they wanted every single sport
to have the option to be wearing Nike shoes, every athlete. Well, many sports don't require shoes.
And Nike said, that's fine with us. We just want to have a presence and we want to support those
athletes. They did a bunch of R&D on all sorts of crazy things, including like a gymnastics
partial shoe for one specific gymnastics event
because they're just obsessed with
how do we make the athlete experience better?
If they end up in swooshes
and people understand what we're all about,
they'll want to participate in our brand story too.
Well, this reorg was sort of intended
to realign teams at Nike
with the way that they actually interface with the outside world.
So now it's men's, women's, and kids, because you go into a Nike store on Fifth Avenue in New York,
and there's a floor for men's, women's, and kids. And you go into a Dick's Sporting Goods,
and there's a men's, women's, and kids. And so it kind of makes sense. You shouldn't send 12
people from Nike, one representing every
sport, to go meet with the one buyer at the menswear department of that shoe store. But
Nike's an incredibly matrixed organization, and so that's sort of the thing that was happening.
The bear case in this is what has kind of gotten lost is an obsession and focus on these individual sports and the journeys in these sports.
Let's look at the trainers, like just a little example in running. As we learned in the Brooks
episode, the business for them is in the trainers. It's not the race day shoes. It's what you're
wearing to get your three mile or your five mile in a few mornings a week. And you wear those out,
and then you buy another pair, and it's a great business. So there's some Nike running department who needs to be sort of obsessing over that journey
and growing their sales and their share in not just race day shoes with this amazing Vaporfly
stuff, but like the trainers. But look at what's actually happening in the running market. You've
got Brooks, On, and Hoka all becoming billion-dollar revenue run rate companies
in the last 18 months.
Nike, fortunately, their big competitors,
like Adidas, have just been out to lunch.
But these little competitors
who are all nipping at their heels
are doing a great job focusing on their niches.
And when you simplify an org in the way that Nike has,
there's a little bit of a concern around, are they still focusing on their niches. And when you simplify an org in the way that Nike has, there's a little
bit of a concern around, are they still focusing on the niches and are they still focused on
serving athletes in the same way, in an obsessive way that they have been in the past?
Okay. I buy that as a bear case.
So there's a lot of nuance there, but I think that in the same way as that old Disney quote,
so with Disney animation goes the company, sort of like so with running goes Nike, it's a bellwether.
Fair enough.
I totally see what you're saying.
I think if you were to say that the equivalent Disney animation for Nike was running at the beginning, I think it is unquestionably basketball today.
Fair.
And I don't see them slowing in basketball.
Well, I mean, that's the
thing is it's like kind of hard to come up with a bear case. There are all these like little nitpicky,
like I listened to a bunch of Tegas calls and I listened to the earnings calls on quarter and like
in doing my like investor diligence on this, these are the sorts of things that people are
concerned about. A big one is like this potential reversal of strategy on D2C. Like they reopened Macy's
and they put more inventory in Foot Locker
in the last couple quarters.
And that's sort of concerning
because the whole narrative has been,
we're going direct.
But also, uh-oh, we have too much inventory.
So we got to blow it out
and discount it through our retail channels.
There's lots of questions to management
about if that sort of thing is happening right now.
Big slowdown in China, not just them, but all the big brands. It seems like the Chinese market is shifting to Chinese native brands, or there's a lot of signs that that might
happen. And so, you know, the China market is a huge, important set of consumers to Nike. So I
think them figuring out, especially how their social justice stances fit in with the CCP-controlled China, that's a huge open question. And are they
going to be able to address that biggest market in the world for feet or not at scale is sort of
the question. Yep. Makes sense. Honestly, that's the best I got for Bearcase. Let me add on one
more. I don't think this is really a bear case,
but if you're viewing this through the lens of
should I buy the stock, not investment advice,
but versus other companies I could put my money into,
as incredible as this company is,
the operations, the power, the scale economies,
the brand, I think the durability,
it's still not a software gross
margin business, nor is it ever going to be. I love that our complaint is always,
it's not a SaaS company. Well, it's a really good business model. I mean,
look, if you could put all your dollars, you could put it into SaaS companies,
you could put it into Nike. Right. I do think Nike has incredible durability. Yeah. I mean, that's the bull case.
These scale economies are super real and they're in pole position to just keep spending and keep
investing in building this incredibly durable brand. And like products will come and go.
There will be five-year stints where they have the most amazing running shoes that everyone needs to marathon in, and there'll be years where they don't. But the Nike brand and
their media strategy and their brand voice and the way that they deploy into all these local markets
and tweak the messaging to be local appropriate in every corner of the world and manufacture at scale. Like it's just, the Nike brand means something
to billions of people and Nike knows how to make it keep meaning something to them.
Yep. Like I said earlier, there are a lot of swoosh tattoos on bodies around this planet.
That is a bull case right there.
Yep. And the world of globalization and the world of the internet
returns to scale are a big deal and they're in the scale position. And I'm sure both hardcore
basketball fans and sneakerheads would nitpick with this statement, but to me, Nike basketball
and the sneakerhead culture is the core of the driving force, you know, the pinnacle of the Halo, the Jordan brand.
And I just don't see,
it feels like as strong as it's ever been to me.
Yeah, completely agree.
I mean, you listen to these Teague's calls
with Adidas people,
and they're like,
our issue is how to figure out
how to make the brand cool again.
And that does not show up in any way, shape, or form
in the Nike interviews.
Yeah, totally.
All right, well, that closes out Baron Bull.
I have some fun trivia for you, David.
Love it.
So I saw you tweet something about some person in this episode
being related to a person in a previous episode.
I think Daniel Ek commented on it,
and I was trying to figure out what you had just found,
and I'm wondering if this is it. So I'm going to read from Wikipedia. Nisho Iwai was involved in a corruption scandal
in 1979 after it passed on a $500 million yen bribe from McDonnell Douglas to the director
of the Japanese Defense Agency in an attempt to influence the sale of the F-4 Phantom aircraft
to the Japan Air Self-Defense Force.
The scandal was uncovered only three years after a similar scandal involving Lockheed
conspiring to bribe Prime Minister Tanaka. For anyone who didn't listen to our Lockheed episode,
we talked about this bribe bringing down the Prime Minister of Japan, and oh my god,
it happened through Nishio. Yeah. Amazing. I did find that,
and that is an amazing connection. And the deep cut is great for acquired lore,
but that is not what I tweeted about. My tweet was actually about something slightly different,
which was people that we come across in the acquired universe, minor characters who go on
to be major characters in other stories. And it was actually about Don Katz and Audible.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, that's a good one too.
Which I love these wild career changes
where like you go from being a journalist and an author
to starting a technology company.
Yeah, it's pretty cool.
All right, quick carve out.
I think you should go listen to Marc Andreessen
on Lex Friedman.
And then you should listen to him again on Ben Thompson, in that order.
He's been on a little bit of a media tour since he did the...
It's the Andreessen Horowitz strategy.
It's like everything we talked about on the episode with them
and how they're the most media savvy in the game,
in part because of working with Margeet there.
But like, oh my God, he's so smart.
And it's just a privilege to get to listen to him talk every once in a while.
And it's fun that he's out talking right now because his perspective on AI is also,
yes, he's talking his book.
And also, all of his arguments are extremely compelling.
He's very smart.
So I recommend you listen to it.
Well, it's like LeBron selling shoes.
You know that he's selling shoes.
But my God, he's amazing.
Right.
It's like, oh, listen to the venture capitalist who has 30 billion under management
where a lot of it is like betting on the future
that AI is going to be this big thing
that's good for the world.
Talk about how AI is good for the world.
Yes, I can acknowledge that and listen to him
and then be like,
and I completely agree with almost everything you're saying.
Great.
I've listened to the Ben Thompson interview,
but not the Lex one yet.
So I'll have to do that.
I am breathing a huge sigh of relief over here because I was more than ever certain that we were
going to have the same carve out today. Can you guess what mine is? No. Maybe not because we've
been so deep in Nike research to not pay attention to current events. Mine is Speak Now, Taylor's version,
which just came out.
And I feel like Speak Now,
at least for me in my Taylor Swift experience,
is like the forgotten album.
Like I just never think about it.
And then when it came out and I was like,
oh, wow.
Well, A, I was surprised that she's even continuing
to do the re-releases. I thought so. I was like, she doesn't need to, A, I was surprised that she's even continuing to do the re-releases.
I thought so.
I was like, she doesn't need to do this anymore.
She's got the leverage.
Yeah, the ultimate power move would be to stop.
So pleasant surprise that it came out.
And also pleasant surprise to rediscover Speak Now.
Like, there are some bangers on there.
Great album.
It's so funny listening to her now.
How old is Taylor now?
She's exactly my age, 34. Well, she's 33, she'll be 34.
And to hear her singing songs from when she was 21, it's just such a fun juxtaposition.
Yeah, that's cool. I got to listen to it. I literally haven't done anything other than
read about Nike.
Yeah. It's good. There's some great songs on there.
I'll enter my three-day window
right after we finish recording
where I can pay attention to other things again
before starting research for the next one.
Yeah.
Speaking of, we should pick a topic.
There's like a thousand I want to do.
So after this, I'll give you a call
and we can talk about it.
With that, you can get notified,
new feature that we just launched
of all new episodes launching.
Go to acquired.fm slash email,
and we will include some fun Easter eggs in there
in addition to just telling you the episodes live.
But that's the way to get on the email list.
Many of you are already on that.
Thank you for doing that.
It is awesome to be able to have that direct connection with you
and not rely on a Twitter algorithm or anything,
letting you know that we're live.
Anything subject to change.
Yes. Become an LP, live. Anything subject to change. Yes.
Become an LP,
acquired.fm slash LP.
ACQ2 is in any podcast player.
Dave and I have a couple of fun interviews queued up for that.
So ACQ2 should have some good stuff coming soon and join the Slack,
acquired.fm slash Slack.
With that listeners,
thank you for going on this blue ribbon journey with us.
We'll see you next time in Dimension 7.
Wow.
You are bringing a new energy to these outros.
I like it.
It came to me in a fever dream.
Wow.
That is some Black Air Forces energy.
Yep.
All right.
Later.
All right, listeners.
We'll see you next time. Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you? Who got the truth now?