Chapter 1: What vision did Phil Knight have for Nike in China?
50 years ago, when few American companies were thinking about China, Phil Knight, the founder of Nike, saw an opportunity.
He had this vision, and the vision was called 1 billion people, 2 billion feet. So he understood very early on that this was a huge market.
That's our colleague John Emont, who covers Asia. He says that Knight's vision turned out to be prophetic. How big of a success was China for Nike?
An extraordinary success. I mean, just this awesome cash cow.
They had a very strong quarter, mainly driven by strength in China and emerging markets. Shares of Nike reached an all-time high on Friday. Nike continues to shine, beating bottom and top line, punctuated by 22% revenue growth this quarter.
And the company became a model for Western businesses looking to break into China. But now, what's happening to Nike in China is looking more like a cautionary tale. Like many American brands, Nike is now struggling there. And it's dragging down the whole company. This quarter, Nike is projecting a 20% decline in revenue in the region.
The last four years have seen really significant deterioration in the brand. Sales have been dropping fairly precipitously. China is definitely its biggest challenge right now. But if it can't figure it out, China, there's a reasonable question we'll be able to... to figure out everywhere else.
Sounds like Nike's soles are worn down. There's maybe a hole in the toe.
Yeah, the shoelaces are tied together.
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Chapter 2: How did Nike's success in China evolve over the years?
In the 1970s, he started making Nikes in Japan and South Korea.
And these places were getting expensive, and so he was looking for a new place to make them. And China seemed like it had potential, right? In 1978, China began opening to the West. But it was just emerging from the Cultural Revolution, and it was not a place on most American businessmen's to-do lists.
Knight wanted to get into China, at first just to make shoes. But the trick was figuring out how.
It wasn't easy. It's not like today where you can just get on a plane to China and now it's extremely easy to do business in China. It simply wasn't done. And so he asked people he knew, influential people, how do you get into China? How do you go about doing this? And he discusses in his autobiography the nervous drinking that went on before they went to China.
They just really didn't know what they were getting into.
Nike ended up hiring a China expert. And in 1980, Knight and a team of executives made their first big visit to the country.
He insisted that all of his executives, they get in the country and they travel by train. So they weren't just flying places. They got in, I think it was like a 16-hour train ride from... They didn't jog everywhere? I mean, that would have been almost as fast at that time.
I mean, now we think of China as this place of high-speed rails where, what, I think Shanghai to Beijing is something like four hours. But then it would have been like 16 or 18 hours, and there was no air conditioning, and it was the summer, and China gets hot, and so everyone was just wandering around kind of in their underwear.
And he said that some of his executives decided to just strip it too. That's how hot it was.
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Chapter 3: What challenges is Nike currently facing in the Chinese market?
But then there was the other part, which is actually turning this place into a market.
To pull that off, Nike set out to make the brand cool in China from the very beginning. As it was setting up factories there in the 80s, it also struck deals to put its shoes on prominent Chinese athletes.
Olympians, pole vaulters, racers, and they were wearing Nikes from well before the vast majority of China's population could have really afforded Nikes. And I think it definitely generated goodwill, and it associated Nike with the tenacity of China's top athletes.
Nike also understood that it had something going for it. Foreign brands were cool, so the company leaned into that. One former Nike employee told John a story about how that helped the company weather the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s.
My source at Nike had gotten orders to basically try to sell a lot of Nikes fast. And so we had to think hard, how can I just get these things out the door? And he set up an event where you'd be able to buy discounted Nikes, but you had to have a foreign passport to go.
And his thinking was, if I say you have to have a foreign passport to go, that's just going to make this seem like super exclusive and super foreign. And Chinese people are going to really dig that. And he said it worked like wonders.
I mean, that sort of just shows how, you know, in those years, how much cachet came from being foreign and, you know, the perception that if it's a foreign product, it's elite, and if foreigners buy it, it's cool.
I mean, it's also interesting that it shows sort of two things. One, this executive understood how to create a buzz in a way that people would like. You know, I mean, that sounds like in a different context, people might be offended by that. I mean, you try that today, that might not work very well.
No, I don't think so.
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Chapter 4: How did Nike's initial strategies shape its brand in China?
Nike also faced allegations of poor working conditions in its overseas factories, including the use of child labor. Here's Knight responding to those allegations and announcing reforms in 1998.
We have raised the minimum age of all footwear factories to 18. And all apparel and equipment factories, the minimum age is 16, the same as it is in the United States. And I really do have to add this, that there has never been a time in Nike's history where child labor has been a problem.
— Still, none of this seemed to stop the company's momentum in China. In 2008, Beijing hosted the Olympics for the first time. It was a huge moment for China, and Nike sponsored many of the country's Olympic teams. Around that time, the country transitioned from being a Nike manufacturing base to being a big buyer of its sneakers.
From about 2008 to 2015 period, that's when two things started happening. One, China was just growing quite fast for a lot of that period. So China was becoming just a major market for Nike in terms of selling its shoes. And also, at the same time, Nike was getting antsy about... wage growth in China. And so it was actually shifting its manufacturing to Vietnam.
So it was around that period that we started seeing a lot of the China market for shoes just explode.
So Phil Knight carries out this strategy. He steps down as chairman of the board in 2016. And so at the end of his tenure, how big and how important had China become at that point?
I would put the peak at around like just pre-COVID-ish, early COVID. You know, it was huge. So in 2019, for example, the company announced 20 consecutive quarters of double digit growth in China.
Wow, that's enormous. Double digit growth.
I mean, I imagine that, right? How often do you get that in business? So it's not only that China is just so huge in terms of what it's bringing in for the company, but it's also just growing so fast. So if you think about yourself as an investor, you're thinking like, wow, this is incredible.
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Chapter 5: What controversies surrounded Nike's operations in China?
That's next. The first hint of trouble for Nike in China started on social media. Around 2021, there was a lot of global attention on Xinjiang, a region in western China where a lot of companies source cotton, and where the U.S. accused China of human rights abuses.
Companies like Nike announced that they were not going to source from Xinjiang. And around 2021, Chinese nationalists sort of cottoned on to what these Western brands had been saying and took great offense to it.
Chinese customers were furious about Nike's boycott and posted videos online burning Nike sneakers.
They took a big hit in sales and they just had to put their head down for a while.
It was almost like Nike was trying to make a statement to the American market that they were not going to be perceived as supporting these allegations of human rights abuses. And then they got almost canceled in China for making a statement that a lot of American brands did.
That's right. So it just showed how it was becoming much harder to both succeed in the U.S. and the West and succeed in China at the same time.
Meanwhile, homegrown Chinese athletic shoe companies were starting to eat into Nike's business. One of Nike's main Chinese rivals is a company called Anta. It was started in 1991 and was originally a factory for Western companies before striking out on its own.
Anta was making decent quality athletic shoes and was able to advertise to the Chinese market that we're a Chinese shoe brand. And they were able to sell shoes rather inexpensively, right? I mean, Nike did have large markups, right? That's why China brought in so much profit.
Price was one way Anta started beating Nike. But its quality was also making huge leaps.
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Chapter 6: How did the 2008 Olympics impact Nike's presence in China?
Yeah. Yeah, that's right. And Li Ning has the Way of Wade shoes because of, you know, from Dwayne Wade. And so they were taking Nike on, right? They were going right into Nike's backyard, essentially. And they were really gutting for Nike's spot. And pretty openly, the CEO of Nike, Aventa said, you know, our goal is not to be the Nike of China. Our goal is to be the Anta of the world.
And Anta was quicker to jump on trends than Chinese shopping culture.
So China's retail market, especially in the past few years, has just gotten hyper-competitive. So the Chinese shopper is very online. They're really looking for deals.
Lots of sales are happening not just online, but on social media via live streams.
It's a bit like the shopping network stuff that we sort of grew up with. It's somebody holding up a shoe often, talking about how the shoe's really good, how you could wear it, what it's good for, how the price is right, you know, stuff like that.
Bro, I am over here on Chinese TikTok watching the Chinese live streams. Hello, everyone. Today is March 19, the last day of our Brand Day sale. If you missed today or yesterday, this is your chance.
It was hard for Nike executives to know how much they should embrace Chinese social media trends. You know, do you jump in on the short-form video app Douyin? Or do you have to be a bit cautious about it? And so I think there was a lot of hesitation about how to approach some of these new sales platforms and new ways of selling. But ANTA certainly didn't have that.
So ANTA brags about how they have AI avatars that are doing this live streaming, live selling, right? They're future-forward.
Nike, on the other hand, has been criticized for relying too much on its past. For instance, younger Chinese customers wanted variety and innovation, but Nike was still leaning on its classics like Air Jordans.
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Chapter 7: What factors contributed to the decline of Nike's market share in China?
So, like, for example, I spoke to one person, you know, an employee in Nike in China, a former employee in Nike in China. He remembers a cousin coming up to him and saying, wait, Michael Jordan, he's dead, right? And it's like, no, no, no, the legend still lives, is what the guy told him.
So Nike is still rolling out, you know, sort of the old hits, but younger people in China aren't as interested.
All these factors have created real pain for Nike's business. After years of double-digit revenue growth in China, the company is now seeing double-digit declines. Nike said it's working hard to turn its business in China around by writing off unsold inventory and revamping its stores. The executive said in March that sales of running products were growing.
As we've covered a lot on the show, Nike is also struggling everywhere, including in the U.S. So how much do you think this is a product of Nike just slipping across the board versus Nike struggling specifically in China?
Yeah, it's a really great question. And I suspect folks in Nike are trying to get to the bottom of this one, too. This is part and parcel with Nike's broader global struggles. There's this feeling among consumers that they have dropped the ball on innovation, that their products are not as good as their competitors, that they're just not leading the pack anymore.
But then there are these major China-specific issues. They didn't have too much competition in China for so long. And so the fact that they were sort of caught sleeping on the innovation front is hitting them even harder in China, where there are these domestic brands who have been innovating, who are cheaper, and who are very popular.
Nike isn't the only American brand struggling in China right now. A lot of U.S. companies are having a hard time there these days. American brands that once dominated are facing new competition from local ones. And John says it shows that China isn't quite the same opportunity it was when Phil Knight first showed up there on that sweaty train ride.
American companies, they have to be prepared to move much faster, embrace digital tactics that maybe don't feel right or don't feel necessary elsewhere, to not think that just because you are huge and seemingly dominant in this market, that that's necessarily going to be the case two years from now.
How difficult will it be for Nike to turn things around in China?
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Chapter 8: What does the future hold for Nike's business in China?
Before we go, we have a question for you. Are you about to graduate or did you just graduate? If so, how are you feeling about AI in your career? Hopeful? Annoyed? Excited? Anxious? Why? We want to hear from you, college grads. Send us a voice memo to thejournalatwsj.com and we might include it in an upcoming episode. That's all for today. Wednesday, May 20th.
The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and The Wall Street Journal. Additional reporting in this episode by Inti Pacheco. Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow.