NIKE: The rise of Nike, Success Story
NIKE: the world’s most popular and biggest sportswear company. In just over 50 years one man’s dream of better shoes turned to a global corporation worth over a $100 billion. Today, we are going back to the earliest days of NIKE to figure out how that magic happened and what the ingredient to their success.
The year was 1962 and Phil Knight had just graduated from Stanford. As any business graduate can tell you, becoming an entrepreneur is difficult as you don’t have any good ideas, but Phil had one. He was a distance runner back in university and in one of his business classes he had written a paper purposing the following ideas:
Phil had seen how Japanese cameras had replaced dominant German cameras in the American market, and he wondered whether Japanese shoes could do the same to Puma and ADIDAS, which were at the time extremely popular in America. After writing that paper and graduating, Phil became obsessed with his idea about bringing Japanese shoes to the USA. Of course, he didn’t actually own any Japanese running shoes and few he had seen were brought stateside by soldiers who had been stationed in Japan during the occupation after the Second World War. But this lack of exposure only reassured Phil that he had stumbled upon a great opportunity. He knew that to take a advantage of it he’d have to establish contact with a Japanese company and negotiate to import their goods to America, both of which were actions he had exactly zero experience with. But, as is befitting of the man who’d later create NIKE, he went ahead and just did it.
In November 1962, he flew over to Japan like tourist and just started exploring. In the beautiful city of Kobe he stumbled upon a shoe store that caught his eye. It belonged to a company called Onitsuka Tiger and the shoes that they made were (for their time) very high quality, so much so that Phil was determined to import them back home. He presented himself as a shoe distributor of America and arranged a meeting with the company’s founder. Phil made up a company name on the spot and offered to become Onitsuka’s distributor in America, a proposal which probably to his surprise the owner actually accepted. With nothing more than his confidence, Phil had become the exclusive distributor for Onitsuka Tiger in the USA. He received his first shipment of 12 pairs of Tiger shoes in 1963 and he started selling them out of his back of a car at every morning track he could drive to. Obviously though , his strategy wasn’t scalable, so he went to the only person he knew who understood more about running shoes than he did: his former coach at the University of Oregon, Bill Bowerman. Now, Bill was easily one of the most famous coaches in America at the time: he had in fact trained multiple Olympic athletes. He liked the Tiger shoes so much that he wanted to partner up. Thus, in January 1964 Bill and Phil incorporated Blue Ribbon Sports, each investing $500 into it. They spent all that money in first order, which at $3.33 a pair, amount to 300 pairs of shoes. The shipment came through in April 1964 and thanks to Bill’s connections it was sold out by July. In their first year, BRS sold $8000 worth of shoes and with that money Phil started hiring salesmen for his company. In 1965 their revenue had increased to $20000 and pretty soon they opened their very own store in Santa Monica. While Phil was handling the business side of operation, the actual innovation was coming from Bill. He was the guy who single-handedly brought jogging to America. In 1996 he wrote a book about it that sold over a million copies, and of course their company was among the first to start marketing the Tiger shoes for jogging.
Bowerman was all about innovation and with every new shipment from Onitsuka, he’d cut open a few shoes to see how they were made, and he’d always try to improve them, by for example adding to the cushion or using more lightweight materials. He’d constantly send notes to Japan requesting changes; he was effectively designing Onitsuka’s shoes for them. It was one of Bill’s designs that catapulted BRS into mainstream: the Cortez, as he called it, became one of the best selling shoes in 1968, undoubtedly thanks to 1968 Olympics, held in Mexico. Thanks to the Cortez, BRS sold $300,000 worth shoes in 1969. But they had a big problem: the Cortez was so successful that they couldn’t keep up with the demand. Every new shipment that they received sold out faster than the one before, but Onitsuka kept sending them at the same glacial pace. What Onitsuka were actually doing was satisfying their local demand in Japan first and then sending whatever was left to America. Phil and Bill knew that to expand they would have to evolve beyond being just a simple distributor. Then they realized they held all the cards: the Cortez was Bowerman’s design so as soon as their contract with Onitsuka expired, they were free to start making it for themselves. Luckily for them, their contract would end in 1972, just before the Olympics in Munich. Thus, Phil had plenty of time to prepare for his big move. In 1971 he started working on branding: his first employee suggested calling the brand NIKE, after the Greek goddess of victory. Then Phil needed a logo, so he went to a nearby university, snatched the first graphics design student he could find and told her to make him a logo. For the impressive sum of money $35 he got this:
In hindsight that was money well spent and with this branding now complete, Phil was ready for the Olympics. This time, instead of locking himself into exclusive agreements, Phil established a network of subcontractors across Japan. With production under his control, Phil could finally spread his wings. From then on, the story of NIKE became one of growth. They became the largest sportswear company in America in 1989 on the back of brilliant marketing like the “Just Do It” campaign and y signing rookie athletes that would eventually became famous across the world.