The Nike environment

Nike is an organisation working towards developing products that help athletes of every level of ability reach their potential. In its mission statement, Nike expresses that it wants to bring inspiration and innovation to every athlete in the world. Nike is a formal organisation with a clear beginning and a specific goal which is to develop products that athlete reach their potential. A formal organisation has been defined by Schein as: the planned co-ordination of the activities of a number of people for the achievement of some common, explicit purpose or goal, through division of labor and function, and through a hierarchy of authority and responsibility (Mullins 2002: 98).
The business Nike used to be heavily engaged in is footwear products but it grew and diversifies from a footwear distributor to a global marketer of athletic footwear, apparel and equipment. Along the way, Nike has established a strong Brand Portfolio with several wholly-owned subsidiaries including Cole Haan, Converse Inc., Hurley International LLC, NIKE Golf, and Umbro Ltd. Nike is a very competitive organisation, Phil Knight (Founder and CEO) is often quoted as saying that ‘Business is war without bullets.’ Nike has a healthy dislike of its competitors. With rivals such as Adidas, Reebok, Puma, and others, competing to be the number one sports brand in the world, Nike is operating in an extremely competitive environment.
The Nike environment is a two-way, matrix organization, where team members often report into two areas such as geography and a global function. In the Nike brand, teams work across footwear, apparel and equipment product engines. Being a prospector, Nike is continuously searching for new products and markets to exploit. As Nike is a formal organisation, it has adopted a matrix structure for its organisation.

Nike adopted the matrix structure because it operates on two areas; the geographical environment and global functions in six geographies-North America, Western Europe, Eastern/Central Europe, China, Japan and emerging markets. In every continent, the functions vary differently (eg.footwear sizes for Asian market is different from the US market) as such the global function is taken into consideration.
From the Nike Matrix structure in Figure 1.1, employees have two managers-functional department manager and respective team manager. It breaks the unity of command concept, the understanding that low level employee should have only one superior to whom they should report to. Instead of unity of command concept, the matrix structure has a dual chain of command-the concept that low level employees have to report to several superiors. For example, an employee in global function from the team product apparel has to report to the functional manager in global function as well as to the team manager.
The strength of a matrix structure is it facilitates the laboursaving distribution of specialists as the specialists are shared among the different departments in the organisation. It also helps to create specialists because employees who keep doing the same job day in day out for a long period of time will be skilled in the particular job. For example, from the Nike Matrix structure in Figure 1.1, a particular specialist in the research and development department can offer his specialisation to the product apparel department. Another advantage is, it fosters participation within the different departments, for example in Nike matrix structure, employees work for two bosses and a lot of consultation is needed within the two departments as such, the unequivocal and recurrent contact concerning diverse specialties in the matrix structure can add up to enhance interaction and additional elasticity.
The movement of information on a particular project will be controlled and secured. There will be supplementary openings for staff advancement in matrix structure; employees will get the chance for promotion. Furthermore, the matrix structure reduces the propensities of departmental members to become so focus on their own goals that the organisation’s overall goals are being overlooked. It helps the teams in Nike organisation to focus on the organisation’s goals instead of the respective team goals.
The major weakness of a matrix structure is it compromises the unity of command concept by having a dual chain of command where employees have to report to more than one superior, causing difficulties of co-ordination, creating role conflicts and uncertainty under imprecise expectations. It can also cause stress to the employee. For example, from the Nike Matrix structure in Figure 1.1, an employee in the product apparel department who neglected his duties in his original department (Apparel Department) was probed by his team manager, and the employee can accuse the functional manager (Geographic Division) for giving him other duties to perform that clashes with his original duties given by the team manager, this in turn can generate tension between the two managers or the employee gets confused so as to which duties he must prioritize.
This can also cause the employees to skive during working hours and become irresponsible as they know they can blame it on either their team manager or functional manager. Confusion and power imbalance will arise. Problems of the extent of authority that the team managers have over employees from other department and whether the team managers will get the support of other functional managers will surface. Overlapped in managerial responsibilities will cause both functional and team managers avoiding responsibilities over an incident.
The matrix structure will also bring out the ‘more talk than action’. Employees may have to attend more meetings which can hinder their duties as they have to attend separate meetings held by the functional and team managers and productive time is wasted. That is why my proposed structure for Nike will be to use the Divisional structure. The division will be created according to the type of products. By using divisional structure, it creates smaller, manageable parts of an organisation and develops a business-level strategy to compete.

Place your order
(550 words)

Approximate price: $22

Calculate the price of your order

550 words
We'll send you the first draft for approval by September 11, 2018 at 10:52 AM
Total price:
$26
The price is based on these factors:
Academic level
Number of pages
Urgency
Basic features
  • Free title page and bibliography
  • Unlimited revisions
  • Plagiarism-free guarantee
  • Money-back guarantee
  • 24/7 support
On-demand options
  • Writer’s samples
  • Part-by-part delivery
  • Overnight delivery
  • Copies of used sources
  • Expert Proofreading
Paper format
  • 275 words per page
  • 12 pt Arial/Times New Roman
  • Double line spacing
  • Any citation style (APA, MLA, Chicago/Turabian, Harvard)

Our Guarantees

Money-back Guarantee

You have to be 100% sure of the quality of your product to give a money-back guarantee. This describes us perfectly. Make sure that this guarantee is totally transparent.

Read more

Zero-plagiarism Guarantee

Each paper is composed from scratch, according to your instructions. It is then checked by our plagiarism-detection software. There is no gap where plagiarism could squeeze in.

Read more

Free-revision Policy

Thanks to our free revisions, there is no way for you to be unsatisfied. We will work on your paper until you are completely happy with the result.

Read more

Privacy Policy

Your email is safe, as we store it according to international data protection rules. Your bank details are secure, as we use only reliable payment systems.

Read more

Fair-cooperation Guarantee

By sending us your money, you buy the service we provide. Check out our terms and conditions if you prefer business talks to be laid out in official language.

Read more