Summary of the book and key learning with
respect to designing an organization and improving its effectiveness
Below is a review of NIKE – The Vision Behind The Victory, Jaico
Publisher, written by Tracy Carbasho. She finds strength in the kind of details
the company is built upon solid research and development initiatives. This
book provides a comprehensive analysis of the company, giving readers a full
appreciation of its fascinating history and the attributes and strategies that
have helped Nike outlast its competitors. Material derived from interviews with
star athletes and marketing experts lend additional insight into the Nike
phenomenon.
This book is a must read not just for
sports fans or history buffs, but also for business leaders, as well as
advertising and marketing executives, who most carefully can learn lessons from
Nike’s success and who will benefit from the Nike examples. The book is well
written in a manner that makes its readers want to keep turning pages.
I review this book for key learning with
respect to designing an organization and
improving its effectiveness; this book though provides great learning not
only from organization perspective but also from strategically business
management. As a marketer, one finds one of the most interesting aspects of the
book to be the focus on Nike’s communications – its advertising, marketing, and
public relations. Creative, meaningful, and forceful communications have been a
vital part of Nike’s success and the author paints images of the commercials
and communications that have made Nike famous.
I evaluate the book as very good in scale of 8.5 out of 10 not just because the
book has provided all the relevant information in organizational context but
also it proves to be motivational one with much strength of inspirations of various
leaders. The book makes its readers intrigued and let them discover everything
they ever wanted to know about a company that, starting from humble beginnings,
succeeded in making “Just Do It” the catch phrase of a generation.
Tracy Carbasho’s book, Nike- The Vision Behind The Victory, succeeds
in highlighting the little known facts about the iconic brand and how small
development had the biggest impact on the brand. The Swoosh logo is one such
case. The logo was created by graphic design student, Carolyn Davidson, who was
paid a paltry $35 for her services. By the time she left Nike in 1983, Phil
Knight, Co-founder and Chairman of Nike, gifted her a diamond ring with the
swoosh logo and an undisclosed amount of stock. Today, Nike is synonymous with
Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and a host of other stars. The ability to customise
products based on feedback from these athletes from the time it was founded in
1964 as Blue Ribbon Sports.
The book throws the reader open to
controversial issues like how Nike stood by one of its key brand ambassadors, Tiger Woods,
at the height of his troubles. The other instance is when Serena Williams,
another Nike endorser, was fined $82,500 after her outburst in the 2009 US Open
semi-final. Identifying the potential in stars and signing up with them early-
Woods and John McEnroe are good examples- had stood this brand in good stead.
For the users of the brand, the iconic swoosh symbol is the last word in
quality.
Chapter 1 Inspiring Excellence
The company’s story is
inspiring for sports fan and even for individuals who get football confused
with soccer. It stars with – Adrian Peterson, the star running back for the
Minnesota Vikings, wanted to be like the sports heroes he saw in the Nike
commercials when he was a kid. He had his first pair of Nike shoes at the age
of 7-8 years in the year 1978. “I wanted to be a Nike athlete when I was little
and I’m living my dream now,” says Peterson. The chapter also captures how the
Jordan’s name has become synonymous with Nike and the philosophy of continually
improvement that has kept Nike at the top of the athletic footwear since 1964.
Chapter 2 The Vision behind the Victory
Personally, this chapter
inspires me a lot to read this book again. The chapter looks back to see where
the Nike story began in order to explore the magnitude of what the company has
achieved. Nike exemplifies how greatness can be built upon modest formation.
The chapter encapsulates story of Bowerman, who was a nationally respected
coach, had truly believed vision “if
you have a body, you are an athlete.” It also shows his different experiments and innovations in running
shoes. He believed strongly in his ideas and was not deterred by the rejections
from existing shoe manufactures. Chapter includes the partnership, Blue Ribbon
Sports (BRS), the precursor to Nike,
between Bowerman and Knight, who was working on ideas of high-quality running
shoes and was doing MBA from Stanford in 1962. Jeff
Johnson, working on commission, as the first employee of BRS, was skilled at
multi-tasking and managed operations while two founders could not do all of the
work.
In context to org. design and effectiveness, the
chapter explains the affiliation between the corporate, the perfect time for
the founders to start doing what they wanted to do from the beginning, the
movement of the company in the right direction with each step carefully
planned, and the strategically plotting of their next move including the birth
of Nike footwear in 1972. The
company believed in appealing to the masses and started aggressively
promoting their products with “There is no finish line”
The story is motivating enough
to make one want to “Just Do It,” no matter what “it” might be. It shows the emphasis on how it is important to do advertising with
increasingly powerful, full-blown campaigns since the beginning of an org. It portrays how Nike’s advertisements are
known for featuring magnificent talent – athletes in spotlight and creative
designers developing memorable campaigns. Even before Facebook and Twitter
became the hottest buzzwords, Nike had adopted an integrated approach to
marketing that utilized the internet. The chapter illustrates Nike’s strategies
of engaging customers via social media
and it to be rank seventh among 100 brands in regard to social media space.
For any org. to be effective, Nike provides a marvelous example of how the
campaigns depict that the org. understood what it is as a brand and understood
in a holistic sense who is its customer. Nike was never a case of market
myopia. It advocates advertising has to be about the consumers one serve, not
just about the brand. That is what Value-based org. strategy is. It is a model
of becoming consumer-centric and not about products-seller one.
Nike has a diversity and
inclusion component built into its organization structure. It focuses on
including people of diverse background and skill sets. Diversity and inclusion
are fundamental to Nike’s performance. A special Diversity and Inclusion Team
is responsible for engaging employees, providing business consultation, and
developing innovative tools, models, and designs.
Chapter 4 Become Legendary
The chapter is dedicated to
Michal Jordan, who played a pivotal role in Nike’s comeback in mid-1980s. Nike
officials recognized his talent before him getting to gain fame and took him to
endorse AIR JORDAN shoe in 1985. The innovative design represents a unique
concept in performance footwear to help players become more agile. The company
launched its latest edition of the campaign in October 2009 with the intention
of showing youths the importance of teamwork
and epitomizing Jordan’s legacy of team leadership.
Chapter 5 Setting Precedents in College
Sports
Nike’s efforts to have an
overwhelming influence on college supports include its presence at the Ohio
State University versus the University of Michigan game. The company knows how
to wield its influence in a variety of venues, including college sports. The
chapter further signifies how Nike intensifies the anticipation surrounding its
products by employing unique marketing strategies featuring athletes.
For org. design and it effectiveness, its influence on college sports
should be closely monitored because there is a potential “danger” of where the
company’s power could lead. It also recommends intermix of technology,
advertising and org. elements in a way that one cannot be completely separated
from the others.
Chapter 6 When Nike Athletes Stumble
Another word has occasionally
been associated with the company’s products, advertising campaigns, and most
recently, the athletes who endorse Nike products. The word is controversy. Nike
has remained true to the athletes who endorse its products, even when they step
out of the line with their behavior. The chapter talked about Tiger Woods,
Michael Vick, and Serena Williams in relation to Nike.
It is an identity of an effective org. that Woods publically
expressed the reasoning behind his dedication to Nike during an interview in
2008 and company chose to support him after the allegations surfaced about his
extramarital games.
Chapter 7 High-Tech is high stakes
The true reason why the company
has stood the test of time, from the first prototypes and the early versions
endorsed by Jordan, is the technology behind the products. The org. design is built upon solid
research and development initiatives that have paid off tenfold with customer
loyalty, name recognition, and big-dollar ROI. The chapter talks about Nike
Product-line, high-tech commercials, more sophisticated products, digital
coaching experience to customers, Exeter R&D, special design elements and
its movement into the 21st century.
For org. effectiveness, Nike lays down the concept of incorporating
technology into sporting apparel, equipment, and accessories to obtain
increased sales, expanding product lines, and thriving in competitive markets.
It’s vital to connect today’s savvy consumers and the need for companies to
continually enhance the technological quality of their products.
Chapter 8 Serving as a Role Model
Sustainability is just one of
many areas in which the company focuses its intension in terms of being a good
corporate leader. The chapter talks about company receiving a myriad of awards
to recognize its commitment to corporate responsibilities, ethics,
sustainability, and climate. It includes how it sent a letter to president
Obama urging him to negotiate a climate deal at the United Nations Climate
Change Conference (COP15).
Nike gives a strong message for
Org. effectiveness as
·
Improving working conditions
via a holistic, integrated business approach to the supply chain
·
Minimizing the company’s global
environment footprint through sustainable product innovation and supply chain
innovation in direct operations and factories
·
Using the power of brand to
provide greater access to the benefits of sports for youths around the globe.
There are significant examples
that shows why NIKE was included among the 99 honorees on the 2009 list of the
“World’s Most Ethical Companies.”
Chapter 9 The Rich Get Richer
The leadership has ultimately
led to a big return on investment. The company first reached the billion-dollar
milestone way back in 1986. Company is managing through the global turmoil
quite well. The chapter describes countless wise decisions made by NIKE over
the years, which explains why it is so powerful in the 21st century.
As effective org practices, the org. is well positioned to leverage
the power of global sports and drive hard against those growth opportunities
that have the most impact. The company’s initiatives to subsegment the
business by category and geography is driving growth via integrated, sharply
focused product innovations, retail experiences, and brand connections. The
company is focusing on its specific product lines.
Despite apparent growth in Asia
and emerging markets throughout the world, the company was forced to make
difficult decisions in 2009 that resulted in a corporate restructuring and
downsizing. Company eliminated approximately 500 of its 35,000 worldwide jobs
due to downtrodden economic environment. The strategy was to enhance
efficiencies, decrease costs, and reduce management layers.
As Org. design, Nike’s restructuring also including reorganizing the
brand into a new model composed of the six geographic areas from four operated
previously. It enabled the company to make quicker decisions by having fewer
management layers involved in the process.
Chapter 10 Sharing the wealth
The chapter explores the major
causes that are supported by Nike and hear responses from celebrities like
Bono, the lead singer of the rock band U2; and renowned cyclist and cancer
survivor Lance Armstrong. Individuals of their stature are pleased that causes
important to their heart are receiving a generous hand from Nike. It further
has story of teaching boys and girls the importance of gender equality as
Nike’s community outreach. It does perform CSR , but because of ethical and
social concerns.
As effective Org. Practices – It
gives example to other companies as how to use their influence in a positive
manner to help communities and individuals.
Chapter 11 There is No Finish Line
Nike is continuously unveiling
a new product, launching another advertising campaign, supporting sponsored
athletes, being visible in community, or tinkering with new technology. The
chapter itself makes a base of effective
org. practices that makes the company successful. It contains various
examples of living with continuous change as there is no finish line.
Besides the
learning that I have discussed chapter wise in form of Org. Structure design and effectiveness, I found other learning too
having direct impact on Org. effectiveness.
· The
Nike sportswear company is organized in a matrix organizational structure, more
commonly known as a flat organizational structure. Nike is a model of a
successful company that uses this structure effectively.
·
For a brand that is
among the most visible globally, Nike’s success story stands apart simply
because success is never taken for granted. Today, this multi-billion dollar
organization stands for apparel and sports accessories.
· Nike’s
immortal ‘Just Do It’ slogan is displayed in the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, DC. The company’s pioneering use of athlete endorsement as the
foundation of its marketing and its dedication to incorporating advanced
technology and materials in their products has forever changed the world of
sports.
· Amazingly,
what is now Nike sprang from the humblest beginnings – two runners with a
passion for improving the sport, willing to sell shoes out of their cars at
track meets.
·
Global competition requires
companies like Nike to react quickly to marketplace dynamics. In flat
organizations, production teams led by product managers can make decisions and
react much more quickly than the traditional department head, which is often
removed from the production line.
·
The marketing mix or
the 4 Ps of Marketing are Product, Price, Place (distribution) and Promotion. SWOT
analysis ( as per the understanding from the book)
EVALUATION
Before going
to direct evaluating the book, I must thank the author for contributing greatly
for very informative project in form of a book.
I am
evaluating the book based on five parameters with equal weightage proportion
and giving them score as Low-1, Moderate-1.5 and High-2, as shown in below
table.
|
High (2)
|
Moderate (1.5)
|
Low (1)
|
BOOK HAS
ACHIEVED ITS GOAL (2)
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
NUMBER OF POSSIBILITIES ARE
SUGGESTED (1)
|
------------ |
----------------- |
|
WHAT ALL THE BOOK HAS COVERED
/ LESS LEFT OUT(2)
|
|
---------------- |
----------------- |
COMPARISON WITH OTHERS (1.5)
|
------------ |
|
------------------ |
CONVINCING ARGUMENTS/ PERSONAL EXP. (2)
|
|
---------------- |
------------------ |
Why I ranked it moderate / Low on few
parameters
1.
I could not find good amount of
data devoted strictly to the quagmire that is the Asian economy. The author may
not find this topic appealing, but the global reader would.
2.
Possibilities are not
suggested. Also, at times, it looks like facts-presented file. Critical
analysis is missing.
3.
Comparison with Other org. has
been made only to emphasis on the best practices followed at Nike. Leading
examples of other companies that Nike has adopted or which Nike must have
implemented are missing. Lack of evident of Nike’s failure could be a reason
for that.
With due respect, I evaluate the book as very good in scale of 8.5 out of
10. The purpose of the book is to discuss the
Vision behind the victory, which it completely presents. Unknowingly, spending
some waiting time at Metro Station, I picked up very right kind of the book for
my project on organization design & development. I recommend this book to
every H.R / O.D.D practitioner as it talks about various strategies being
implemented at Nike with respect to the effectiveness of the organization.