Nike is cutting roughly 1,400 jobs as it reshapes operations amid a prolonged sales slowdown, concentrating the reductions mostly in technology roles across North America, Asia and Europe. The company says the moves will simplify supply chains and centralize tech functions into fewer hubs, while it wrestles with margin pressure and uneven product performance. Expectations for a modest sales decline this quarter and a sharp drop in Greater China highlight the wider forces driving these decisions.
The headcount reduction equals just under 2% of Nike’s global workforce and targets technology teams that support everything from digital platforms to internal operations. Nike framed the move as part of a multi-step effort to streamline how materials, footwear and apparel are brought together and shipped. This isn’t a single one-off layoff but part of a pattern of reshaping where and how work gets done.
Chief operating officer Venkatesh Alagirisamy flagged that the reductions will focus on global operations and explained the company’s intent to centralize key tech talent. Nike is consolidating major technology work into two core locations: its Beaverton, Oregon headquarters and the Nike India Technology Center. The shift is pitched as a long-term efficiency play, not just a short-term cut.
“Teammates whose roles are impacted will hear directly from their leaders and HR partners starting today, and we will work to make sure they have clear information and support through this transition.” The statement underlines that the company plans to walk affected employees through next steps, including what support will be available. Even so, notification and transition periods still leave real uncertainty for those impacted.
These reductions follow an earlier round this year that removed hundreds of warehouse and operations roles as Nike accelerated automation. That January action, which eliminated 775 positions, was framed as part of the drive to make fulfillment and warehousing leaner and more automated. Taken together, the moves reflect a two-part strategy: reduce overlap and replace repetitive tasks with technology where feasible.
Nike also signaled the potential for workforce changes in a March SEC filing, suggesting this step had been under consideration for some time. On the sales front, the company expects a 2% to 4% decline in the current quarter, a reflection of weaker demand and inventory pressures. One bright spot has been the Vomero 18, which pulled in $100 million in sales within three months after launch, showing that standout product moments still matter.
Greater China is the most acute trouble spot, where Nike expects revenues to fall sharply, with forecasts suggesting a drop of roughly 20% after a recent 7% decline to $1.62 billion. The company attributes the weakness there to reduced sell-in volumes and a deliberate effort to rationalize the marketplace, trimming back excessive inventory and clearing distribution channels. Those adjustments are intended to stabilize the business, but they carry near-term revenue consequences.
North America may post modest growth, but gains there are likely to be offset by declines in Greater China and in categories like Converse. Across the portfolio, Nike is relying more on discounting to move surplus stock, which squeezes margins even as it clears inventory. Product rollouts are producing mixed returns, so the balance between promotional activity and premium launches is a tightrope the company must walk.
Nike’s announcement lands against a broader backdrop of retailer restructuring and cost cutting across the sector. Large companies from furniture to e-commerce have trimmed corporate ranks to tighten operations and focus spending on core areas. Those moves collectively amount to tens of thousands of role eliminations across multiple industries since late 2022.
Several household names recently disclosed major workforce adjustments, ranging from cuts in group functions to scaled-back robotics and tech operations. Examples include moves that reduced hundreds of roles at global retailers and tech-heavy restructurings that wiped out thousands of positions at large platforms. Companies are reassigning resources toward automation, consolidation and cash-preserving measures as they brace for uneven consumer demand and shifting regional dynamics.
