Nike Case Analysis Group Project LAUREN STUTTS‚ DARRYL TODD‚ ANDREW VAUGHT TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY REPORT…………………………………………………………………………… 1.0 INDUSTRY ANALYSIS…………………………………………………………………… 2.0 COMPETITOR ANALYSIS………………………………………………………………… 3.0 CLIENT ANALYSIS………………………………………………………………………… 4.0 ISSUE RECOGNITION……………………………………………………………………… 5.0 STRATEGIC RECOMMENDATIONS……………………………………………………. SUMMARY REPORT 1.0 INDUSTRY ANALYSIS The performance sportswear and apparel industry can be defined as
Premium Nike, Inc. Athletic shoe Adidas
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
Premium Management Strategic management Marriage
1.4 Transportation Vehicles and Metrics The most repeated formula for UDC in the typical medium size city is to have a fleet of about 5 small vehicles and a larger one for the heaviest deliveries. As an example Gerardin (2007) has recorded the following fleets for some French UDCs 1. In La Rochelle‚ 6 electric vehicles with capacity for 1‚300 pounds and one 3.5t electric truck. 2. In Monaco‚ 6 small vans (including one electric) and a 7.5-ton truck. 3. In Paris (La Petite Reine)‚ the fleet consists
Premium City Urban area Developed environments
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY Case Study about the CSR of Nike prepared by Paul SOMER TABLE OF CONTENTS • Background of the implementation of CSR at Nike (besides the existing legal commitment) • Activities of Nike regarding CSR • Responsibility by impementing the Environmental Apparel Design Tool • • Nike Responsibility Governance Conclusion and future prospects BACKGROUND FOR CSR OF NIKE • In 1992 it became public that Nike produces in Indonesia at minimum wages • Strike in the production
Premium Social responsibility Minimum wage Corporate social responsibility
SWOT analysis: Nike Introduction Like most companies‚ Nike has corporate strengths and weaknesses. However‚ in the 50 years that Nike has been in business‚ it has weathered most challenges. From its maverick days as an upstart sports shoe brand being sold out of the back of the trunk of its owners’ cars at track meets‚ through the 80s and 90s when it lavished multi-million dollar endorsement deals on sports icons. Following is a SWOT (strength‚ weakness‚ opportunity and threat) analysis of
Premium Shoe Nike, Inc. Athletic shoe
Critical Analysis of Nike History Nike began as Phil Knight’s semester-long project to develop a small business‚ which included a marketing plan. This project was part of Phil Knight’s MBA course at Stanford University in the early 1960s. Phil Knight had been a runner at the University of Oregon in the late 1950s. His idea for his project was to develop high quality running shoes. He thought that high quality/low cost products could be produced in Japan and then shipped to the United
Premium Nike, Inc. Sweatshop Industrial Revolution
Nike‚ Inc. (IPA: / ’naɪki/) (NYSE: NKE) is a major publicly traded sportswear and equipment supplier based in the United States. The company is headquartered in Beaverton‚ near the Portland metropolitan area of Oregon. It is the world ’s leading supplier of athletic shoes and apparel and a major manufacturer of sports equipment with revenue in excess of $18.6 billion USD in its fiscal year 2008 (ending May 31‚ 2008). As of 2008‚ it employed more than 30‚000 people worldwide. Nike and Precision Castparts
Premium Adidas Nike, Inc.
Nike: The Sweatshop Debate analyzes the legal‚ cultural and ethical challenges confronted by global business and will also examine the roles that host governments have played while summarizing the strategic and operational challenges facing global managers at Nike. Having standards in place will protect the organization from a major crisis like the one formally faced by Nike. Philip Knight and Bill Bowerman created the world’s largest sportswear company‚ Nike‚ in 1962. Nike now controls more than
Free Minimum wage Employment Third World
April. 2014 Most of the Nike products provide excellent proof of their product’s use. For example Nike has an advertisement that features Usain Bolt advertising Nike’s shoes and Gatorade. Besides Usain Bolt‚ there is a cheetah which symbolizes speed of the shoe which he races the cheetah across Africa’s wild to also represent the endurance of the shoes. He also drinks a Gatorade to rebuild stamina and starts the race again. The advertisers of the Nike advertisement appeal to the everyday
Premium Usain Bolt Advertising Regulatory Focus Theory
|Corporate Finance | |Nike Case | | | | |
Premium Weighted average cost of capital Stock Stock market