- Nike said it's cutting 1,400 roles in its global operations team, primarily in technology.
- Chief operating officer Venkatesh Alagirisamy announced the cuts in a memo on Thursday.
- The layoffs come as Nike's turnaround plan has taken longer than the company expected.
Nike is benching some of its employees.
The sportswear giant said Thursday that it is cutting about 1,400 roles in its global operations division, mainly in technology. Venkatesh Alagirisamy, who became chief operating officer in December, announced the reductions in a memo to staff detailing several changes "in the coming weeks."
Alagirisamy wrote that the company is in the "final stretch" of the turnaround plan, dubbed its "win now" actions, which focuses on five key areas: culture, product, marketing, marketplace, and in-person presence.
The changes include modernizing manufacturing, reallocating resources, and reshaping Nike's tech team, according to the memo.
The cuts mark Nike's second round of cuts in 2026, following the elimination of 775 distribution center jobs.
CEO Elliott Hill told analysts in a March earnings call that the turnaround plan is taking "longer than I would like."
Read the full memo below:
Team,NIKE, Inc. is in the final stretch of our Win Now action plan.Across the company, we have been taking deliberate steps to strengthen our foundation, sharpen how we compete, and build a model designed to deliver long-term profitable growth. Global Operations is critical to that effort.Today, I am sharing the next phase of that work and doing so with the entire company because of the scope and importance to our collective future.Over the coming months, we will continue evolving Global Operations to better serve athletes and the business with more speed, simplicity, and precision. Some of that work is happening now and more will continue over time as we align our teams, capabilities, and footprint to the future needs of the company.This is not a new direction. It is the next phase of the work already underway.Earlier this year, I outlined four actions we're taking across Operations to help make NIKE, Inc. a more responsive, resilient, responsible, and efficient company: optimizing our supply chain footprint, accelerating technology deployment, investing in upskilling our teams, and strengthening our partner and supplier relationships. The changes we are making now build on that work.At its core, these shifts are about building a Global Operations organization that is more focused, more integrated with the business, and better built for the pace of sport.In the coming weeks, several significant changes will take effect across Global Operations. These actions will result in changes to some team structures, work locations, and headcount.- Technology Modernization. We're reshaping our Technology team to sharpen alignment with the business, build leaner teams, and accelerate what matters most. This means consolidating our technology footprint, streamlining our structure to move with greater speed and focus, and doubling down on the locations where our work gets done with a focus on two strategically important hubs — Philip H. Knight Campus and our Nike India Technology Center. These are deliberate moves to build a leaner, faster, more connected Technology organization — one built to deliver for the consumer, the athlete, and the business.
- Air Manufacturing Modernization. We are modernizing how work gets done across our Air Manufacturing Innovation (Air MI) facilities in Beaverton, Ore.; St. Louis; and Vietnam by increasing resiliency, streamlining processes, and adjusting staffing to match the needs of the business. The changes will help us stay flexible as demand changes, accelerate future innovations and continue to deliver the product quality athletes expect from Nike.
- Converse Ground Game. We are moving some Converse Footwear Manufacturing and Engineering resources closer to our factory partners to enable stronger real-time collaboration and to better support the brand's needs going forward.
- Materials Supply Chain Integration. We are bringing our Materials Supply Chain work more directly into our Footwear and Apparel Supply Chain teams while continuing to build on the valuable capabilities already in place. This strengthens how we operate from raw materials through finished product, enabling faster more synchronized decisions and ground-breaking innovations across our best-in-class manufacturing network.
EVP, Chief Operating Officer











