Nike consistently underreacted to these concerns and as a result created an even larger public relations challenge for themselves by not internalizing it equivalent to a threat to profitability. As with any crisis that gets ignored, the critics only get louder the more they perceive their voices not being heard. For Nike, this continued on for years until they began to aggressively attack the problem as if it were one impacting profits, including the development of auditing and independent monitoring programs, and an open-door policy to Congressional critics who had the power to initial investigations and define if any U.S. laws were being broken or not.
Many of Nike's competitors subcontract production to Asian factories similar to those used by Nike. What was Nike singled out by human rights and labor activists?
Nike was singled out for a variety of reasons. First, the company's lack of seriousness in response to human rights and labor activities was taken as arrogance, which only fueled the activists to attack the company more. Second the company refused to apologize and stated instead that they had no responsibility for their supply chain partners' ethical or moral behavior. Keep in mind that during this period there are other companies including HP who have shown remarkable levels transparency with regard to their supply chains and have thoroughly defined Codes of Conduct for them as well. Third, Nike has exceptionally large profit margins and is considered the market leader in the U.S., both when measured by total sales and also by gross contribution margin. It dominates entire areas of the sporting goods and sporting apparel marketplace, and has done so through price reductions and very aggressive channel-based tactics. As a result, the company has gained a reputation for being exceptionally aggressive and focused on driving smaller competitors out of markets and also out of business in some cases. Fourth, Nike kept seeing the successful culmination of this challenge not as actually helping the workers achieve a better and more equitable standard of living, but in quieting their many critics. This came through as the entire set of actions and strategies taken were more focused on how to organize the company to respond to its many critics first, and not necessarily ensure payment to the worker level. It did not in fact step in and enforce its many programs (MESH, Code of Conduct, et.al.) with any urgency or level of pain inflicted on suppliers, with only one supplier being fired through the program's entire duration (DeTienne, Lewis, 359). Taken together, all of these factors contributed to Nike being promoted from just a violator of human and worker rights to the iconic...
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