Thread regarding Nike Inc. layoffs

Terminated due to policy violation

I was terminated from Nike due to a policy violation around Nike Giving. I donated to an org around 2017 and that org asked few Nike employees to pool money and donate. Some got kickbacks. I did not know it’s illegal to pool money and donate. The clause is not on the benevity portal but hidden under Nike Hr site it’s easy to miss the clause

Long story short I was terminated and all my years with Nike I was a highly successful and saved tons of money for the company. I didn’t get a second chance to explain myself. Intel on other hand warned the employees for same issue

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Post ID: @OP+1ll439yi

35 replies (most recent on top)

Most of the laid off employees fetched high ranking jobs in other companies because Nike paid the IRS fines and relieved almost 100+ employees off any law suits. Such a sham of an organization! While unpaid credit card dues result in fines and jail terms in extreme cases, these people have almost no record of the tens of millions of dollars of financial crimes they committed. Disgusting!

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Post ID: @9Wrbe+1ll439yi

Apple fired at least 200 people for similar violation in March 2024. I heard they are still investigating more people.

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Post ID: @9Lkfk+1ll439yi

Shame if they are hired back. should be ban not to work for Nike

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Post ID: @Difd+1ll439yi

Heard from the HR friends,, folks who got fired due to violations are provided an option to come and work back in Nike. They just need to apply for a job position that are new and it can also be a contract. There are few recent jobs opened explicitly for this and only be filled by the folks that are fired. What a shame!

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Post ID: @Dowq+1ll439yi

Some of y’all never had desks near the loss prevention team and it shows. I sat next to them for a few years and after hearing stories of the deep and detailed investigations they ran I wouldn’t even give out my employee number to certain family members who qualified.

BS on there not being a visible policy. There’s an organization that does service animal training and they tell people they are selling the dogs to to “just ask someone who works at Nike to donate through the portal to save money.” My HS friend bought the dog off this advice and was confused when I told her I could lose my job if I did that. It was a diabetes dog for her kid and I didn’t do it because it was clearly against the policies. Yet 50 people really thought getting a kickback from a charity was ok?

What’s more disappointing is all the smart, honest and loyal people in the wholesale org who got laid off so people like that could steal money and feign ignorance.

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Post ID: @lydm+1ll439yi

These folks should not be allowed to work again at Nike, should be banned as this is not ethical and shouldnt be given an excuse. As always there are many folks who donated to the charity and got a kick back were not caught.

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Post ID: @jsyo+1ll439yi

How the heck can an organization that is supposedly help people in need encourage donors to engage in illegal activities? Makes me wonder what their true intent is....in running the charity

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Post ID: @8trn+1ll439yi

Do the right thing = Don’t get caught

Look how long it took to start correcting the contracting corruption. …have we even started?

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Post ID: @7zac+1ll439yi

@7jfd you summed it up nicely. A bunch of people lost good, six-figure jobs because they thought it would be cool to skim a few hundred dollars off their charitable contributions. Not smart! It’s also harder to find a new job when you aren’t currently employed. Even harder when the reason you aren’t currently employed is because you were fired. These people will also likely have to pay the money back in addition to whatever fines and penalties the IRS imposes. Not a great way to end a Nike career.

At the same time these people were just following the “greed is good” ethos set by Nike’s executive team and the Board of Director’s compensation committee. If it can be morally justified to pay a CEO tens of millions of dollars and 800x what the median employee earns, is it really so horrible in comparison for employees to skim a few hundred dollars from where they can? I for one grew tired of management telling me to “do the right thing” when there were so many examples of them not practicing what they preached.

The real lesson here should be: take what you can but don’t get caught.

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Post ID: @7hfa+1ll439yi

Does the charity name start with C? I heard 50+ folks were let go due to this scam. These guys should worry about IRS and govt investigations

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Post ID: @7mjm+1ll439yi

OP, you got fired for not being smart.

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Post ID: @7pns+1ll439yi

My understanding is that the deal was thus:

  1. Give $100 on Giving Tuesday (2x match)
  2. Charity gets $300
  3. Charity gives you > $100 back (say $150 -- maybe even $200 -- not sure how much "commission" folks "made" on this)

So you made a profit and the charity got a donation and Nike got a tax deduction.
However, I believe the IRS brought this behavior to Nike's attention with this highly technical term they call "illegal" so Nike had to act. I'm sure they've turned over all details to the IRS too for further follow-up so I'm sure losing your well paying job for a small side income came with some additional legal expenses.

I also understand these id10ts used the company Slack to document/coordinate it all 'cause we all know that's SUPER private.

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Post ID: @7jfd+1ll439yi

I think it could be the donations for 5 years in a row?

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Post ID: @3gew+1ll439yi

@3fyl+1ll439yi : I know few folks who donated to charity are not fired , I believe if they got any kind of kickbacks from the charity or any evidence related to that got fired. That what I heard ..

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Post ID: @3rxo+1ll439yi

@3wxr+1ll439yi couldnt have said it better. @op : lesson learnt, do the right thing hereon.

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Post ID: @3tgf+1ll439yi

How did they pick the candidates for layoffs though? everyone who donated to that charity on a particular year? repeated years?

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Post ID: @3fyl+1ll439yi

Almost anytime you’re officially fired it’s a good idea to at least speak with an employment attorney. They may have useful information you didn’t know about or consider.

That said it’s also important to remember a few things. Like most states Oregon is an “at will” employment state which means you can be fired for almost any reason or no reason at all, and with no prior notice. Gotta love America! No wonder so many people are a nervous wreck, knowing that in most jobs there’s no such thing as job security.

Also from what I heard the people who were fired for this incident either knew or should have known that what they were doing was prohibited. Obviously the kickbacks at least were a huge problem and maybe even fraud. Wouldn’t surprise me if the IRS was all over that.

If you genuinely didn’t know or think you were doing anything wrong speak with a lawyer. It could be that you were mislead by someone else either accidentally or maliciously. If the latter that might make you a victim too! You know all the actual facts better than me or most other people so only you can decide if consulting a lawyer is worth your time. Like I said above though your chances probably aren’t great of being reinstated or receiving other recompense. For better or worse Nike usually knows what it’s doing when it fires people.

Now your time is probably best spent looking for another job and figuring out how you’re going to explain the involuntary departure from Nike. My advice is this: be brutally honest when you interview and convincingly explain that you unintentionally violated a company policy regarding charitable donations. If possible also be willing to offer a new company evidence that it was an honest mistake. When I interview people I would much rather hear bad news that’s honest rather than have someone think they can get one over on me. Truth is I’ll probably find out the real reason they were fired and if it’s any different than what they told me that’s an obvious hard “No” on hiring them. Even if I hire them and learn after the fact that they lied to me I’ll then either see if they can be fired for lying about it, or I’ll do whatever I legally can to make their work lives as miserable as possible until they quit. Once that bond of trust is broken it isn’t coming back.

I’ve seen people snap back from far worse things. As long as you don’t start telling people you were a star volleyball player at Baruch College there’s probably hope for you.

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Post ID: @3wxr+1ll439yi

Are you allowed to come back and work for Nike again in the future. I know a lot of folks were impacted in the last six months part of the charity donation scam. Many young engineers were impacted as well.

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Post ID: @2jxx+1ll439yi

Think of these 2 scenarios:

  1. charity gives $100 to a Nike employee to donate on a particular day when Nike double matched. Charity receives $300($100 original and $200 from match). Then charity gives the $300 to another employee to donate and receive $900($300 original and $600 from matching). The charity just turned $100 it has into almost $1000 while actual employees didn't contribute anything.
  2. someone wanted to turn $1M of dirty dr-g money into clean money so gives $1000 each to 1000 employees to donate to a charity. The $1M now becomes $2M of clean money.

Both cases are extreme and most likely not what actually happened, but you can see why donating money that's not yours can be problematic and there can't be any grey area. A lot of innocent minded engineers probably didn't think about these things. It sucks that these employees and Nike both ended up being victims because Nike lost good talent along the way. A good charitable organization never should have asked people to do these things.

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Post ID: @1ana+1ll439yi

I know some of these guys and they were very talented and worked really hard for many years. Without their contributions several capabilities could not have been delivered. I feel they were misguided by few people who were greedy. It’s just sad to see them go like this. They deserved better and this will leave a huge hole in the talent across many functions

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Post ID: @1uqn+1ll439yi

There was another org started by one of Senior Director of Nike . Folks got fired on Feb 3 are all related to that .

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Post ID: @1uft+1ll439yi

i think charity name is CHETANA foundation

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Post ID: @1yda+1ll439yi

Some of the people associated with the charity firings were so shocking that I wouldn't be surprised if some of them didn't know what they were involved in

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Post ID: @1gmx+1ll439yi

A bunch of employees donated to an org, and some of those employees got kickbacks from the org? You didn’t get a kickback? But you were still fired because you donated money given to you by non employees? Were the employees who got kickbacks fired too?

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Post ID: @1rii+1ll439yi

This is why I don't donate, j/k. I think this goes beyond policy violation. I assume Nike gets tax deduction from charity matching. If a charity turns out to be fraudulent, there may be negative IRS or legal implications for Nike. Nike gets enough bad press as is. I can understand why they don't want to take any additional risk here.

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Post ID: @1snq+1ll439yi

this same ponzi charity bunch of tech and legal guys got fireds for running for years?

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Post ID: @1nbc+1ll439yi

If you are innocent as you stated....fight it dude. Don't back off...

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Post ID: @1ikn+1ll439yi

What was the Charity?

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Post ID: @1vwy+1ll439yi

Come on.

You had to know this was not the intent behind the matching program.

Cheating a donation program is dishonest.

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Post ID: @1wun+1ll439yi

Contact a lawyer, instead of posting on this site.

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Post ID: @1jjq+1ll439yi

tell us more about the kickbacks

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Post ID: @1wwg+1ll439yi

Did this pool of people include non-nike employees?

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Post ID: @1xao+1ll439yi

Contact a lawyer and fight Nike!

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Post ID: @1eft+1ll439yi

Recently on Feb 3

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Post ID: @1nao+1ll439yi

Sorry to hear that. Were you just recently terminated for something that happened 5 years ago?

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Post ID: @1avh+1ll439yi

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