Nike, originally known as Blue Ribbon Sports (BRS),
was founded by University of Oregon track athlete Phil 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 Olympics, Bowerman made the first pair of Nike shoes
for him, contradicting a claim that they were made for Phil Knight. Says Davis,
"I told Tom Brokaw that I was the first. I don't care what all the
billionaires say. Bill Bowerman made the first pair of shoes for me. People
don't believe me. In fact, I didn't like the way they felt on my feet. There
was no support and they were too tight. But I saw Bowerman make them from the
waffle iron, and they were mine.
In 1964, in its first year in business, BRS sold
1,300 pairs of Japanese running shoes grossing $8,000. By 1965 the fledgling
company had acquired a full-time employee, and sales had reached $20,000. In
1966, BRS opened its first retail store, located at 3107 Pico Boulevard in
Santa Monica, California next to a beauty salon, so its employees no longer
needed to sell inventory from the back of their cars. In 1967, due to rapidly
increasing sales, BRS expanded retail and distribution operations on the East
Coast, in Wellesley, Massachusetts.
By 1971, the relationship between BRS and Onitsuka
Tiger was nearing an end. BRS prepared to launch its own line of footwear,
which would bear the Swoosh newly designed by Carolyn Davidson. The Swoosh was
first used by Nike on June 18, 1971, and was registered with the U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office on January 22, 1974.
In 1976, the company hired John Brown and Partners,
based in Seattle, as its first advertising agency. The following year, the
agency created the first "brand ad" for Nike, called "There is
no finish line", in which no Nike product was shown. By 1980, Nike had
attained a 50% market share in the U.S. athletic shoe market, and the company went
public in December of that year.
Add caption |
Together, Nike and Wieden+Kennedy have created many
print and television advertisements, and Wieden, Kennedy remains Nike's primary
ad agency. It was agency co-founder Dan Wieden who coined the now-famous slogan
"Just Do It" for a 1988 Nike ad campaign, which was chosen by
Advertising Age as one of the top five ad slogans of the 20th century and
enshrined in the Smithsonian Institution. Walt Stack was featured in Nike's
first "Just Do It" advertisement, which debuted on July 1, 1988.
Wieden credits the inspiration for the slogan to "Let's do it", the
last words spoken by Gary Gilmore before he was executed.
Throughout the 1980s, Nike expanded its product line
to encompass many sports and regions throughout the world. In 1990, Nike moved
into its eight-building World Headquarters campus in Beaverton, Oregon.
No comments:
Post a Comment