CSR Analysis and Impact on Operations Nike has a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics that includes its commitment to the environment and is a signatory of the UN Global Compact. Nike has created a team of sustainability managers led by an independent director. Its environmental goals include producing ’eco-friendly ’ products and minimizing its environmental impact through the reduction of greenhouse gases‚ organic solvents and PVCs. Nike acknowledges the difficulty of tracking environmental
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Nike Inc. International Strategic Marketing 8 Prepared for: 22-03-2009 Prepared by: Table of contents Case summary 3 Analysis Growth strategy 4 Competitor Analysis 6 SWOT analysis 8 Five forces model 9 Nike Case Summary Nike is a major publicly traded sportswear and equipment supplier based in the United States. It is the world ’s leading supplier of athletic shoes and apparel‚ and a major manufacturer of sports equipment
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MARKETING MANAGEMENT STUDY CASE FOOTBALL BETWEEN NIKE AND ADIDAS INTENSIFIES OFF PITCH Feriani (0000006978) Teguh Prabowo (0000006985) A. Executive Summary Nowadays the revolution of the football boot has taken a dramatic shift. The battle of the brands has begun and it is claimed ‘football will never be the same again’. That was the bold statement delivered by Nike‚ who countered the release from rivals Adidas. Just hours ahead of the American sports giants’ multi-million
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Work by social scientist and marketing professor Vladas Griskevicius suggests that often the emotions we experience immediately before we are presented with a message or a proposal can determine which decision shortcuts influence us most. In the study researchers showed subjects a series of short film clips that were designed to induce either a feeling of fear ("The Shining") or a feeling of romanticism ("Before Sunrise"). A control group read a short story that evoked neither feelings of fear or
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Hitting the Wall: Nike & international labor practices How well and how responsibly do you think she has handled these issues to date? What advice would you give her about how she should now proceed? What principles should guide the company’s policies and practices? What opportunities‚ constraints‚ and risks does the firm face? What are the scope and limits of its social responsibilities? There are two aspects to look at how Nike has acted: 1) The intension with which it has acted:
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I. Identification 1. The Issue Nike has been accused of using child labor in the production of its soccer balls in Pakistan. This case study will examine the claims and describe the industry and its impact on laborers and their working conditions. While Pakistan has laws against child labor and slavery‚ the government has taken very little action to combat it. Only a boycott by the United States and other nations will have any impact on slavery and child-based industries. Futhermore the U.S constitution
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1. Should Nike be held responsible for working conditions in foreign factories that it does not own‚ but where sub-contractors make product for Nike? Yes‚ but I do not believe that the firm is 100% responsible since it is the sub-contractors who operate and create conditions for workers. Low-cost manufacturing is Nike’s strategy‚ and it is realized by outsourcing the manufacturing process to cheap labor countries. If Nike were responsible for all of working conditions of workers at sub-contractors’
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FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT 1. Capital Investment Funds invested in a firm or enterprise for the purposes of furthering its business objectives. May also refer to a firm’s acquisition of capital assets or fixed assets such as manufacturing plants and machinery that is expected to be productive over many years 2. Gross the goods or merchandise kept on the premises of a business or warehouse and available for sale or distribution 3. Bilateral investment treaty (BIT) is an agreement establishing the
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Case Brief Summary Nike is one of the world’s top shoemaker companies. It was established by Phil Knight and Bill Bowerman in 1964. At the beginning‚ the company was looking at Asia to find the cheapest sources of production for its shoes. Nike never owned a factory in Asia‚ instead the company found subcontractors with whom they contracted production. Nike got started selling low-priced but high quality shoes in the 1960s manufactured by the Onitsuka Tiger Company‚ a Japanese manufacturer. As
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* | Origins and history Nike‚ originally known as Blue Ribbon Sports (BRS)‚ was founded by University of Oregon track athlete Philip Knight and his coach Bill Bowerman in January 1964. The company initially operated as a distributor for Japanese shoe maker Onitsuka Tiger (now ASICS)‚ making most sales at track meets out of Knight’s automobile. According to Otis Davis‚ a student athlete whom Bowerman coached at the University of Oregon‚ who later went on to win two gold medals at the 1960 Summer
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