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Heidi O’Neill on Creating a Seamless Digital/Retail Experience

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Heidi O’Neill is unflappable.

She was elevated to her current position, president of consumer and marketplace, right as the pandemic hit. And considering that she oversees the company’s fleet of more than 8,000 owned and partner retail stores globally — all of which were shuttered as the virus raged around the world — it forced her, and Nike, to quickly pivot.

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“I started my official new role on March 11, two weeks earlier than I was supposed to start, as sport went dark, and the world went dark. John [Donahoe, chief executive officer] called me and said, ‘OK, it’s game time.’ That’s a moment I’ll never forget,” O’Neill said.

But O’Neill, who started her career at Levi Strauss and has been with Nike since 1999, was well-positioned for the challenge. Before being promoted to the new role, she was president of direct-to-consumer with responsibility for the company’s digital efforts as well, a category she still oversees.

Even before the pandemic, Nike had been shifting its focus more to its own direct channels and away from the traditional wholesale model on which it was built.

Since fiscal year 2018, Nike Direct has driven more than 75 percent of the revenue growth at the Nike brand, fueled by the company’s digital business, which posted sales of more than $9 billion in fiscal year 2021, nearly 35 percent of the total volume. This is a number that Nike achieved three years ahead of plan. By fiscal year 2025, the company has projected, Nike Direct will represent about 60 percent of the company’s overall business, led by growth in digital. And the Nike Mobile App posted increases of more than 50 percent in the third quarter of the current fiscal year, overtaking nike.com for highest share of digital demand.

So even before the health crisis, O’Neill was responsible for fueling growth in the d-to-c channels.

“I learned something about starting a new role,” she said, “which is that sometimes you can’t take the time to earn it or learn it, you just have to own it from the beginning.”

And own it she did.

“Certainly, none of us had handled a global pandemic before,” she said. “But we’d been through hard times before, and we just came in ready to make decisions,” she said.

While some of those decisions were tough ones — shutting all the stores and dealing with manufacturing and shipping delays — the team immediately “lit up other digital experiences” to replace what was lost at the brick-and-mortar level.