As I reflect on eight years of experience at Nike in a variety of areas:
My observations are that the Sr. Director/VP are hyper-focused on how they show-up to their peers and leaders at the S-and-beyond level. In many cases (not all) there is a clear lack of empathy stemming top-down for the day-to-day work that the 'worker bees' engage in. They're disconnected from the people they 'lead' and don't seem to care; you can just feel it. Workers that are able to sacrifice core values and s----up to their managers (make them look good, build them decks, laugh at fake jokes) are promoted while team players focused on the actual work and delivery day-to-day suffer with lower wages, less promotions, and often feel a sense of dread or decreased value (subtle bullying is rampant still). From my experience HR is ineffective at correcting this and toxic managers some how hang around.
The organization needs a way to gauge whether a manager is not just effective but authentic, kind, and cares about team success. The new HR manager training does not solve this (sorry HR, nice try). There is raw ambition, and odious rot, at these ranks. Fill these roles with people that have grown up with the company in Oregon. Here's a crazy idea, promote your heritage and reward teamwork, not selfishness.
The fraying of what was once a great culture is evident across many areas of the organization. I know because I've worked across the matrix and continue to observe a level of dissatisfaction across disciplines. I hope that other people still in the machine, and in a position to take constructive action, take these words to heart and influence what good they can.
This is no longer 'the men of Oregon' but the 'groupies of greed'.
Good luck.