Ettally
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posted on 10-24-2019 at 05:36 AM
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Nike’s CEO Mark Parker Is Stepping Down
Nike’s CEO Mark Parker is stepping down after nike schuhe herren cmore than a
decade running the world’s largest sportswear company, according to a statement on Tuesday. Parker joined the company
in 1979, worked his way up the ranks and was named CEO in 2006. He will step aside on January 13, but will continue to
oversee the board as executive chairman.
Nike has tapped one of its nike schuhe sale board members, John Donahoe, to take
his place. Donahoe, 59, currently serves as CEO of ServiceNow and previously spent a number of years running eBay. He
has served as a Nike board member since 2014 and also remains chairman of the board at PayPal. In a statement, Parker
pointed to Donahoe’s “expertise” in both digital commerce and technology and said he is “ideally suited to
accelerate our digital transformation.”
While Parker has presided over the company at a time of nike outlet robust sales
growth and a rising stock price, the company has also faced a number of controversies in recent years under his watch.
Earlier this month, Parker was found to have a direct link to a doping scandal. According to the U.S. Anti-Doping
Agency, he was included on several emails that outlined the ongoing efforts of Alberto Salazar, a Nike-backed coach, to
find a performance-enhancing drug that wouldn’t trigger a positive doping test.
In 2018, two former female employees sued the company and described a toxic workplace culture in which sexual
harassment and gender discrimination nike air force 1 low were
not uncommon. They claimed Nike often hired women at lower salaries than men and promoted female employees less
frequently than their male counterparts. The women also claimed that reported incidents of sexual harassment were
ignored or handled poorly. The allegations rocked the company, prompting an apology by Parker and the departure of
several executives, including Trevor Edwards, who was president of the Nike brand and widely considered a top candidate
to succeed Parker.
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