How Kevin Plank Aims to Capitalize on Under Armour’s Underdog Position and Return to Growth

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In Kevin Plank’s mind, Under Armour is a $5 billion start-up. And he’s got a game plan mapped out to return the company to growth and market dominance — a plan the chief executive officer and his management team laid out to WWD following an investor conference on Thursday in New York City.

But the turnaround is not going to happen overnight. Although the meeting was classified as “qualitative,” with no specific figures revealed, the team said it will take until the fall of 2025 for the results to show up on the bottom line.

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The brand did, however, say that it expects to reach the projections it released earlier this year for the fourth quarter and full year.

Plank acknowledged that this is Under Armour’s fourth restructuring attempt since the business began — but it’s a markedly different business than it was 28 years ago. In addition to exceeding $5 billion in annual sales, the company has more than 24,000 points of distribution and some 2,000 stores around the world. But with that scope comes a lot of complexity, he admitted. And it’s time to “let the baggage go.”

Plank said that during his absence from the CEO chair — at a time he characterized as “anti-founder” — he kept busy with other projects such as starting a whiskey business and working on development in his hometown of Baltimore. But with the company struggling, he felt it was time to return.

Since returning to the CEO post on April 1, Plank has surrounded himself with a team of seasoned veterans, some of whom have been at Under Armour for years and others who are new to the company. That includes newcomers Yassine Saidi, chief product officer, who has worked for everyone from Adidas and Puma to some of the big European fashion houses, to one-time Adidas and Reebok executive Eric Liedtke, executive vice president of brand strategy, who is overseeing the messaging for Under Armour.

Plank summed it up this way: “As a global sports house — capable of equipping athletes head-to-toe on and off the field, pitch or court — we are hard at work putting in place the people, structures and strategies essential to realizing Under Armour’s full potential over the long term.”

Kevin Plank
Kevin Plank

In the four-hour investor presentation, the executives outlined the key points of Plank’s plan, which he began to lay out after returning to the CEO position this spring. That includes dramatically reducing promotions and number of products offered and returning to an aggressive marketing stance. At the conference, the company said it will spend $500 million in marketing next year to get its message out. And that message is about helping the underdog succeed, a role Under Armour itself also falls into.