NIKE reviews

3.9

73% would recommend to a friend

(13,128 total reviews)
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Elliott Hill

79% approve of CEO

52% positive business outlook

NIKE has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 13,128 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The NIKE employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manifattura industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

13K reviews
1.0
Mar 17, 2018

Nike is a toxic workplace for women

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Gym access, decent food, quiet rooms

Cons

It seems it's #TimesUp and #MeToo at Nike this week, with the "retirement" of the brand president and firing of another VP. I don't know what went down, but the fact that the company is now going to open up an anonymous hotline for complaints and is promising some soul-searching about the culture there indicates to me that upper management is aware of a company-wide issue -- one that's pervasive, systemic, and stretches far beyond the C-Suite. Good. It's about time. Nike HQ is toxic for women. It has been for a long time. And not in the ways that are easily identifiable -- not everyone is getting Matt Lauer'ed or brushing off lewd comments at an office happy hour. It's far more insidious than that-- and it's not just the entitled, overpaid white men who are responsible. Here are some ways the environment is toxic for women: - Getting ignored, marginalized or talked over when trying to present in a meeting. (The standard-issue white male Senior Director will be checking his phone, trust me). Toxic. - Leaving early to pick up a sick baby at daycare, feeling the resentment of the rest of your team (particularly childless women) following you out the door. Toxic. - Being passed over for promotions as a woman, doomed to tread water in middle-manager-land forever, because you've been deemed either too aggressive or not committed enough because you leave early to pick up said sick baby (see above). Toxic. - Checking your email at 3 a.m. because you're up and dealing with a kid with an ear infection, only to discover a brusque, frustrated note from your boss sent at 11:53 pm asking why you haven't turned in a project yet. Toxic. - Standing around at an office function, watching the lads and bros (all Senior Directors) shmooze with the VP as you stand off with the other women (managers, "specialists") and wait your turn to try and make an impression on said VP (white, male, usually British) and hope he remembers your name. Toxic. Look - some of this probably sounds like standard corporate-America griping, and perhaps it is. But having worked for other Fortune 500 companies, I can tell you that the environment at Nike is unique. Politics, backstabbing, strict adherence to hierarchical, patriarchal norms, and frat-boy/lad culture all conspire to make it a fairly awful place for women, particularly moms. The only women I know who ever made it up the ranks (a double-edged sword, as the job will then consume your every waking moment) are the ones who acted like men to get there -- swaggering about, doling out sports-talk, ingratiating themselves with the right people while stepping on others to get up the ladder, and routinely placing work as the highest priority over family time and/or anything else. Of all the painful circumstances of working there, the woman-on-woman warfare was the worst. Women at Nike HQ are forced to squabble, scheme and bully each other to fight for position and influence at a company that gives out precious little of either. Toxic. I'll leave it at that. #TimesUp, Nike, and not a moment too soon.

2.0
Jul 4, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of good managers, good career opportunities if you are aggressive enough in owning your career, chance to work with cutting edge technologies alongside some of the smartest engineers, decent benefits, access to many facilities on campus.

Cons

Nike recently announced that employees will receive paid days off for 5 days in July and 5 days in August. On the surface, this sounds like the company really cares about employee well-being by offering essentially additional PTO. That is until you realize that half of those employed within corporate are contractors that are not eligible for this "benefit" and are forced to take an unpaid day off, so they are basically getting a 20% reduction in pay for the summer (with no option to make up those hours even if they wanted to). The company has basically found a clever way to transfer 8 hours of pay to permanent employees by taking away those 8 hours of pay from their contractor counterparts.

2.0
Feb 19, 2023

Don't do it.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1) If you are determined to live in the Portland area, Nike is probably one of the better local employers to work for. 2) The brand is well-recognized, so having Nike on the resume can help secure interviews at good companies down the road.

Cons

It seems like the company lost a lot of top talent due to mandatory back-to-office. Teams are siloed and don't work well together. Regular reorgs make it difficult to gain momentum. The culture is fairly passive-aggressive, ego-driven, and cult-like. The people who succeed here are those that drink the kool-aid, talk in sweeping generalizations, and become comfortable in stagnation. I left after 6 months. For context, I have 10 years of experience across half a dozen Fortune 500 retail companies.

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