Latest news with #HeidiONeill
Yahoo
18-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Shuffle Board: Nike's Latest Leadership Realignment, Green-ish Founder to Direct CCI
Tommy Hilfiger owner PVH Corp. has named David Savman as global brand president of Calvin Klein, succeeding Eva Serrano, who will remain with the company through the end of the year as an advisor to support the transition. Savman joined PVH in 2022 and currently serves as PVH's global head of operations and chief supply chain officer, and in 2024, also served as interim CEO for PVH Europe, credited with 'repositioning' the region's growth. He will also continue in his current role until a successor is named. Athletic giant Nike announced several changes to its senior leadership team. More from Sourcing Journal USPS Appoints David Steiner as Postmaster General G-Star Taps Botter Designers for Premium Collections Nike Relents on Thai Wage Theft Case, Albeit With 'Deficiencies' in Plan Elliott Hill—Nike's president and CEO—and Heidi O'Neill—president of consumer, product, and brand—divided the consumer, product, and brand leadership into three areas: consumer and sport, marketing, and product creation, inclusive of innovation and design. These roles will now report directly to Hill, as O'Neill is retiring from Nike after 26 years with the company. She will continue to serve in an advisory capacity until September. Amy Montagne has been promoted to president, responsible for 'obsessing and serving' consumers across all sports. Phil McCartney has been promoted to executive vice president, chief innovation, design and product officer, responsible for 'the creation of innovative' products, including those across Jordan and Converse. Nicole Graham has been promoted to executive vice president, chief marketing officer. Tom Clarke has assumed the new role of chief growth initiatives officer. Global sportswear brand Puma has named Dominique Gathier the Teamsport business unit's vice president. He replaces Matthias Bäumer, who became Puma's chief commercial officer earlier this year, reporting to chief product officer Maria Valdes. In his new role, Gathier will be responsible for the entire product team in the business unit to lead the development and execution of product strategies and collaborations. Amsterdam-based denim label G-Star has announced the appointment of Rushemy Botter and Lisi Herrebrugh as creative directors for its premium collections. The design duo better known as Botter will reintroduce and reinvigorate the brand's Raw Research collection. The first collection is set to debut during Paris Fashion Week in January 2026. The Lycra Company has promoted North America director of marketing Melissa Riggs to the role of chief marketing officer. In this role, Riggs will oversee the planning, development and execution of brand and marketing initiatives to support the company's operational objectives and growth plans. Before joining the Lycra Company in 2022, Riggs spent 11 years at the Molson Coors Beverage Company, specializing in partnership marketing and distributor go-to-market planning. Cotton Council International (CCI), the export promotional arm of the National Cotton Council of America (NCC), has named Green-ish founder Liz Hershfield as its new executive director. She succeeds Bruce Atherley, who retired at the end of March. In this role, Hershfield will leverage her vast experience with U.S. cotton, sustainable fashion and supply chain management to 'globally elevate' the non-profit's 'The Cotton USA Difference' effort. The National Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO), a Washington, DC-based trade association that represents domestic textile manufacturers, elected Chuck Hall, president and CEO of Barnet, as chairman; and Amy Bircher Bruyn, CEO and founder of MMI Textiles, Inc., as vice chair. In addition to the appointment of a new chairman and vice chair, NCTO elected chairs for each of its five councils. David Adkins of Lenzing; Geoffrey Hietpas, The Lycra Company; and David Poston, Palmetto Synthetics, were elected to the fiber council. Chris Alt, American & Efird; Marc Doyon, Gildan; Justin Ferdinand, Kentwool; Tim Manson, Meridian Dyed Yarn Group; Eric Noe of Buhler Quality Yarns; and Jay Todd of Service Thread, were elected to the yarn council. Allen Jacoby, Milliken & Company; James McKinnon of Cotswold Industries; Leib Oehmig of Glen Raven; Bill Rogers, Mount Vernon; Dan Russian Sage Automotive; and Walter Spiegel, Standard Textile were elected to the fabric and home products council. Gabrielle Ferrara of Ferrara Manufacturing; Marisa Fumei-South of Two-One-Two New York (Alternate) were elected to the finished textiles and apparel products council. Todd Bassett of Fi-Tech; Greg Duncan of American Truetzschler; and Jim Reed of YKK Corp. were elected to the industry support council. Industrial intelligence technology solutions provider Lectra announced that Amit Gautam, founder and CEO of TextileGenesis, has joined its executive committee, which is aligned with Lectra's majority stake acquisition of the Dutch company in December 2022. Sign in to access your portfolio


Forbes
13-05-2025
- Business
- Forbes
Nike Makes Leadership Changes As Sales Fall And Controversies Continue
"I strongly believe Nike's path to sustainable, profitable growth will be through sport,' said Nike ... More CEO Eliott Hill. (photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images) Nike CEO Elliott Hill just announced major leadership changes after little more than six months on the job. He's replaced Nike president Heidi O'Neill with another Nike veteran, Amy Montagne, who previously headed up Nike Women. O'Neill assumed the role of president, consumer, product and brand in 2023 and has now decided to retire after 26 years with the company. Hill also split the president's responsibilities across functions, giving him more direct oversight of critical product development, marketing and growth initiatives with new leaders reporting directly to him. 'I'm confident that with this new structure and leadership team in place we will be able to better line up and leverage all the advantages that make Nike great,' Hill said in a statement. He and Nike need the help. In the first full quarter under Hill's new 'Win Now' strategic plan, revenues continued to fall, down 9% to $11.3 billion in third quarter. Nike stock is trading nearly 30% off levels since Hill joined. And the brand continues to be plagued by controversies, likely not of his making but that still require him to cleanup the mess. Nike's new 'Win Now' strategy focuses on five key initiatives: Hill quickly realized that leadership changes were needed to get Nike back to winning. Among the shifts are promoting Phil McCartney from vice president of footwear to chief innovation, design and product officer overseeing Nike, Jordan and Converse product development. Nicole Graham is moving from chief marketing officer to executive vice president and CMO overseeing Nike. She will be responsible for enhanced brand storytelling. And 45-year company veteran, Dr. Tom Clark, with a Ph.D. in biomechanics and previously a strategic advisor to the CEO, will take on the new role of chief growth initiatives officer. All will report directly to Hill. However, the most consequential change is promoting Montagne to president. She will be responsible to lead across the consumer and sports functions. Having been promoted from heading up the women's group, Montagne's new position suggests that growing the women's business is a corporate priority. In 2023, women made up about 40% of Nike customers, yet in 2024, women's generated only $8.5 billion in revenues compared to $20.9 billion in men's. Nike has a poor track record when it comes to its female athletes, going back to 2019 when Olympic track gold medalist and long-time Nike-sponsored athlete Allyson Felix penned a New York Times op-ed claiming Nike penalized her for becoming pregnant. This was followed shortly by another New York Times op-ed by teenage track star Mary Cain speaking out about taunting abuse she suffered as part of Nike's Oregon Project. Other prominent female athletes have also abandoned the brand, including gymnast Simone Biles, steeplechase Olympian Colleen Quigley, tennis star Sloane Stephens and runners Alysia Montaño, Kara Goucher, Phoebe Wright and Lauren Fleshman. More recently, there are questions surrounding Nike's treatment of WNBA superstar Caitlin Clark. The company prioritized the introduction of fellow WNBA star A'ja Wilson's signature shoe over the release of the potentially even bigger Clark sneaker, though Clark has publicly expressed no dissatisfaction with her Nike sponsorship. 'Nike is still ignoring Caitlin Clark and destroying shareholder value,' wrote sports podcaster Ethan Strauss under his House of Strauss handle. 'They won't sell Clark, at least just yet. Apparently to appease Wilson,' he wrote, and added, 'The whole endeavor seems astroturfed to satiate Wilson's demands and a loud Internet/WNBA cohort who'll get mad if Caitlin Clark is prioritized.' Nike turned up the juice on the women's front in its first Super Bowl ad in 27 years featuring Caitlin Clark, A'ja Wilson, Sabrina Ionescu, Jordan Chiles, and Sha'Carri Richardson. The 'So Win' ad was praised by many, but also generated controversy, being considered by some as condescending and inauthentic, given Nike's checkered history with female athletes. The voice over provided by rapper Doechii repeated statements that women supposedly hear that challenge their performance. 'You can't be demanding. You can't be relentless. You can't put yourself first. You can't be confident. You can't challenge. You can't dominate. You can't speak up. You can't be emotional,' she said, ending with 'Whatever you do, you can't win, so win.' The last statement is particularly ironic since in athletic competition, there is one place in which women can't seem to win: when they compete against biologically male, trans athletes. The participation of transgender athletes in women's sports has become the most critical sporting issue of our time, intersecting with wide-spread debates about fairness, inclusion, and the integrity of sporting competition. Nike stands on the inclusion side of the debate. 'We're continuing our commitment to helping shape a strong culture of LGBTQIA+ belonging and visibility in sport. We're working to expand sport for the next generation through community grants, athlete partnerships, impactful storytelling, and products that celebrate the full spectrum of LGBTQIA+ expression. Because sport is better when all athletes are free to play as themselves,' it stated in 2023. However, Americans overwhelmingly support keeping women's sports exclusively for biological women. A New York Times/Ipsos public opinion poll conducted this year found 79% of Americans believe that trans athletes who were male at birth should not compete in women's sports. Likewise, a NBC poll among 20,000 Americans found 75% oppose trans women competing in women's sports, including nearly two-thirds of the GenZ cohort aged 18-to-29 years. Perhaps this is why Nike has remained largely silent after Outkick and the New York Times Magazine revealed it provided funds to Boston Children's Hospital and researchers Kathryn Ackerman, a BCH attending physician and associate professor at Harvard Medical School, and Joanna Harper to study the physiological impact of gender-affirming care on athletic performance. While Outkick reported an unnamed Nike executive said the study 'was never initialized' and 'is not moving forward,' the Boston Children's Hospital Magazine winter 2024 issue revealed such a study, supported 'in part' by Nike, was in process to 'fill a crucial gap and inform future policy decisions.' Treating children with puberty-blocking hormones, e.g. gender-affirming care, is a contentious issue on its own, without bringing the sports performance issue into it. The U.K. has indefinitely banned the use of puberty blockers on children under 18, though its decision will be reviewed in 2027. Some 25 U.S. states have enacted laws against gender-affirming care in children and one such Tennessee law is under review by the Supreme Court. All of which brings into question the ethics of performing medical experiments on youth to measure their sports performance, not to mention Nike's support of such experiments. 'Why on earth would a company that makes running shoes fund — or at the very least incentivize —medical experiments on children?' questions Jennifer Sey, founder of XX-XY Athletics and outspoken advocate for keeping women's and girl's sports exclusively for women and girls. 'When it comes to girls' athletic abilities, they are not impaired boys. It's a demeaning and degrading starting point to assert that if we just hamper boys enough it might be ok for them to compete against girls,' she continued. Regarding Nike's involvement in the experiments, Sey gives the company the benefit of the doubt, with questions remaining whether the funding decision was made by the company or its separate non-profit Nike Foundation. Having corporate experience at the highest levels of Levi Strauss, Sey understands how decisions can be made deep within an organization without senior executives' knowledge or oversight. Further, any funding decision was likely made prior to Hill's appointment. Only six months in, Nike CEO Hill is taking the necessary steps to turn the company around. The 'Win Now' strategic plan is all about focusing the company on business objectives: five fields of play, three key countries and five key cities. Hill is also focused on getting the corporate culture aligned with the plan. He's had a chance to work with his leadership team, assess their strengths and weaknesses, pruned those who don't support or can't implement his business agenda and promoted those who can and will, while keeping tighter rein on their activities through direct reports. 'We're taking a long-term view here. We're making the decisions that are best for the health of our brand and business, decisions that will drive shareholder value. I strongly believe Nike's path to sustainable, profitable growth will be through sport,' he said in the second quarter earnings call. Reading between the lines, that statement suggests that Hill is leading Nike back to the 'business of business is business,' in Milton Friedman's words. He's pulling it toward 'normie capitalism,' a term which has become somewhat controversial, yet it means very simply 'product excellence and best-in-class business performance,' as Sey described in her book, Levi's Unbuttoned. Getting back to the business of sport and keeping the entire organization focused on that will be how Hill leads Nike back to profitable, sustainable growth. See also:


Zawya
08-05-2025
- Business
- Zawya
Nike restructures its leadership team
Nike has announced that it is shaking up its senior leadership team, announcing an exit and several key promotions across marketing, design, innovation, and growth to reverse years of sluggish sales. All roles within the senior leadership team will report directly to Nike CEO and president Elliott Hill. Hill and Heidi O'Neill, president of Consumer, Product, and Brand, have decided the Consumer, Product, and Brand leadership will now be divided into three distinct areas: Consumer and Sport, Marketing, and Product Creation, inclusive of Innovation and Design. These roles will now report directly to Hill. As a result of these changes, O'Neill has decided to retire from Nike after 26 years. She will continue to serve in an advisory capacity until September 2025. 'For nearly three decades, Heidi has been a true champion for Nike, for sport and for athletes across the globe. Her vision and dedication over the years have left an indelible mark on Nike and created an impact on the world of sport,' said Hill. 'Among Heidi's many successes, she most recently elevated our brand voice, and innovation and product pipeline by putting sport and athletes at the center of everything we do. I want to thank Heidi for her passion, commitment and service and wish her the best on her next adventure.' The new senior leadership appointments will be effective immediately and include: Amy Montagne, previously VP/GM Global Women's, has been promoted to president, Nike, responsible for obsessing and serving consumers across all sports and driving future growth for the Nike Brand. Phil McCartney, formerly VP, Footwear, has been promoted to EVP, Chief Innovation, Design & Product Officer responsible for the creation of innovative and coveted product, season-after-season. This includes how Nike, Jordan and Converse innovates, designs, and creates products for athletes around the world. Nicole Graham, previously chief marketing officer, has been promoted to EVP, chief marketing officer, leading Nike, Jordan and Converse storytelling to inspire consumers and shape the brands for distinction through the passion and emotion of sport. Tom Clarke, currently strategic advisor to the CEO and member of the SLT, has assumed the new role of chief growth initiatives officer. 'I'm confident that with this new structure and leadership team in place we will be able to better line up and leverage all the advantages that make Nike great,' said Hill. 'These exceptional leaders bring extensive Nike experience and have been instrumental in resetting our priorities to lead with sport and put the athlete at the center of everything we do.'
Yahoo
07-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Amy Montagne Named Nike Brand President, Heidi O'Neill to Retire as the Swoosh Makes More Big Management Changes
Nike announced a series of changes to its senior leadership team late Monday in an effort to 'accelerate' its progress against its Win Now action plan. According to the Swoosh, chief executive officer and president Elliott Hill and Heidi O'Neill, president of Consumer, Product, and Brand, have decided the O'Neill's division will now be divided into three distinct areas: Consumer and Sport, Marketing, and Product Creation, which is inclusive of innovation and design. More from Footwear News These roles will now report directly to Hill, the company said. As a result of these changes O'Neill has decided to retire from Nike after 26 years. She will continue to serve in an advisory capacity until September. 'For nearly three decades, Heidi has been a true champion for Nike, for sport and for athletes across the globe. Her vision and dedication over the years have left an indelible mark on Nike and created an impact on the world of sport,' Hill said in a statement. 'Among Heidi's many successes, she most recently elevated our brand voice, and innovation and product pipeline by putting sport and athletes at the center of everything we do. I want to thank Heidi for her passion, commitment and service and wish her the best on her next adventure.' Heidi O'Neill. Courtesy of Nike As a result of this move, Amy Montagne, previously the vice president and general manager of global women's, has been promoted to president of Nike brand, responsible for 'obsessing and serving consumers' across all sports and driving future growth for the Nike brand. Montagne has worked at Nike for 20 years, and has previously held various VP/GM roles, including Asia Pacific and Latin America, global men's, global categories, global women's, global merchandising, and other leadership positions in North America, running, women's training, and sportswear. Before joining Nike, Montagne worked in allocation, planning, and merchandising at Gap Inc., Mervyn's, and Walmart. Next, Phil McCartney, formerly VP of footwear, has been promoted to EVP and chief innovation, design & product officer, responsible for the creation of innovative and coveted product, season-after-season. This includes how Nike, Jordan and Converse innovates, designs, and creates products for athletes around the world. McCartney is a seasoned professional with 27 years of experience at Nike. He previously served as the VP of Nike footwear, a position he has held since 2016. Over the past nine years, he has contributed significantly to the growth of Nike by working across product development, design, and merchandising for all sports and Nike sportswear.