I have a wonderful story. Working with a friend at the WSJ for a story on this one now. I was at Nike for a number of years, and had no issues. Never written up, actually received a few spot bonuses for performance. Was terminated for performance recently. Let go at the end of the month, with no severance or anything… less than 3 months after returning from parental leave.
So had a new supervisor come onto the team. They seemed fine enough, and I was due to go on leave for the birth of a child in a few months anyways. I had a handful of direct reports. We had been preparing for my leave, and all was going according to plan. New manager was in the loop, and all was well. I go on leave and enjoy my new baby. I come back and all he-l had broken loose. One of my direct reports had walked in and just quit. No notice or nothing. They had sent me an email expressing that there were some concerns with the new manager, and many inappropriate comments had been made. My plan was to address this with HR, as required by policy, when I returned from my leave. On my first day back, my manager sets up a meeting with me first thing in the morning. So I join the call and it’s obviously contentious. Apparently it was my fault that my direct report quit. I was a little confused by this as I was not working at all during this time. Furthermore my manager informed me that I had failed to prepare them for success… yes I had failed to prepare my manager for success before I left on leave. I kinda chuckled at this as I thought they were joking, but they were serious. So knowing what I was dealing with… an unhinged individual completely out of touch with reality… I made my appointment with HR as my former direct report had requested. I meet with this HR rep and tell the story. Things that were said, things that were done, etc… all inappropriate and nothing that would surprise anyone reading here. I was called fat by a member of leadership (I mean I am, but we don’t have to put that on front street in a conference room full of people) my direct report was chastised for speaking to a therapist (my supervisor told them that “stupid Americans are always paying people to hear their problems.”) As I’ve come to learn… this is just normal Nike stuff. The HR rep informed me that “multiple policies had been violated” and they were so sorry for everything and would follow up. I didn’t think much of this. My thought process was that I needed to be on a PIP before I could be fired… or at least written up first. Yeah, I was wrong. They called me in and fired me around 2 months or so after I spoke with HR. They said it was performance dating back to my initial manager at Nike. Funny thing… we still talk. They left Nike for their own reasons, and they informed me that they never had a problem with me or my performance. This was “typical BAU behavior for this leadership team.” Some Karma has been served though. Strangely enough, my former supervisor has been fired, and the wonderful HR Rep is no longer with Nike as well. I’m sure her situation was much like she explained mine to me “a separate issue, and the decision is final” when I stated that it seemed strange all of this was going down just a few months after I met with HR about my manager.
Good news is there is life after the swoosh. Found another job, much happier without all the fake bullsh-t, and double speak. I did try to work with legal on some sort of settlement, but because I don’t check any of those “protected classes” boxes… it didn’t go far. So with the absence of an NDA and living in a one party notification state… I have receipts for all of the “allegations” made here and in the WSJ article (Recordings, screenshots, texts, etc…), I figured the court of public opinion is the best route forward. My advice to anyone is to know the laws in your state of residence and cover your a-s as much as you can. Nike can and will play dirty. Don’t go to HR for anything unless you already have another job lined up. Better yet… leave the toxic place behind all together… unless you’re one of the lucky few to work with a team full of amazing people. Those do exist at the swoosh, but are exceedingly rare these days.