Nike Inc. is putting together a dedicated team of executives and designers to operate a new brand with entrepreneur and reality TV star Kim Kardashianâs apparel label Skims, with plans to release its first collection geared towards women this spring.
Called NikeSkims, the project was kept quiet for more than a year until the two companies teased a partnership in February. The vague announcement promised to deliver a new line of âtraining apparel, footwear and accessoriesâ and pledged to expand the brand globally in 2026. The companies didnât disclose financial terms.
Details are now trickling out about the tie-up, which people familiar with the project say goes beyond a traditional fashion collaboration. Instead, they say NikeSkims will operate under Nike as a sub-brand, much like Nike SB, the companyâs skateboarding business. That means the NikeSkims brand will have its own products, marketing and growth targets and will be run separately from Nikeâs basketball, running and other sports divisions.
Nikeâs biggest partnership is with basketball superstar Michael Jordan, whose brand has its own management team at Nike and has grown into a nearly $7 billion business.
Kardashian hinted at the standalone brand structure when she posted a NikeSkims employee badge that indicated she was employee number one. Since then, the projectâs staff has worked weekends, using codewords and secret meetings to get the new brand ready to debut, one of Nikeâs executives said.
The stakes are high for the worldâs largest sportswear company, which has struggled to bring fresh products to market in recent years and has failed to win over female customers like rivals Lululemon and Alo Yoga.
The NikeSkims collaboration also comes at a critical time for chief executive officer Elliott Hill, who came out of retirement to lead the company last October after his predecessor, John Donahoe, was ousted. Hill has promised to turn around the flailing business, which leaned too heavily on its decades-old lifestyle sneaker franchises and was slow to develop new items.
Hillâs arrival initially boosted Nikeâs shares, but Nike stock is down more than 24 percent so far this year.
Nikeâs secrecy on its Skims project prompted confusion over how the Kardashian-run intimates business fits into Hillâs turnaround plan, which emphasises a return to Nikeâs roots in sports and a focus on athletes over fashion. Hill has said fitness products are a priority.
Skims approached Nike with the initial idea and the two parties have been working on the project since October 2023 under Nikeâs previous CEO, according to a person familiar with the matter who wasnât authorised to speak publicly about the partnership. Hill had jettisoned some of Donahoeâs other pet projects such as Rtfkt, Nikeâs virtual sneaker division.
âIt really didnât feel very authentic to the brand,â said Gina Clementi, a brand strategist who worked at Nike for 12 years before leaving in 2017. Although she isnât working on the new label, she said she doesnât see how NikeSkims is âbuilt on any sort of athletic achievements.â
When reached for comment, representatives from Nike and Skims referred to a previous statement from Heidi OâNeill, Nikeâs president of consumer, product and brand, who said the partnership âunlocks an incredible opportunity to disrupt the industry,â and a statement from Skims CEO Jens Grede, who said the pair are âpoised to create a new standard in the activewear market.â
Kardashian, who raised $270 million in 2023 to value Skims at $4 billion, isnât your typical Nike athlete. But she has been informally connected to Nike for years according to people familiar with the relationship.
Kardashianâs beauty partnership with Coty Inc. ended this year after she bought back the 20 percent of the company she had sold to the cosmetics giant.
Her Nike linkup comes after years of supporting Adidas AGâs sneakers by wearing Yeezy products created by her ex-husband â the designer formerly known as Kanye West.
A representative for Kardashian declined to comment.
Job Postings
In more than two months since Kardashian posted her black and red NikeSkims badge, Hill has let on very little about the brand. He told investors in March only that âwe identified a consumer need and are creating a new market of style-led products that sculpts and performs.â
In recent weeks, though, Nike has moved employees over to NikeSkims, including at least five executives in marketing and operations. Management selected 14-year Nike veteran Jordan Mills to lead operations at the division, which is hiring more employees in product development, merchandise planning, studio operations and graphic design, according to posted job listings. NikeSkims has two co-general managers from Skims: marketing executive Tracy Romulus and merchandising executive Paula Galperin.
Nikeâs team, led by womenâs fitness executive Jaclyn Safley, is located at Nike headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon, and in Los Angeles, where Skims is based, according to recent job listings.
Safley, Mills and Galperin didnât respond to requests for comment. Romulus declined to comment.
Wall Street analysts say they are waiting to see if NikeSkims can make Nike more competitive in the athleisure market and boost the sportswear companyâs womenâs business, which has grown to $8.6 billion in annual sales but is still much smaller than its $21 billion menâs business.
âAthletic brands have a mixed track record with celebrity partnerships, but NikeSkims seems like a big win for Nike,â Telsey Advisory Group analyst Cristina Fernández said. âIt helps that Skims already has a sizeable revenue stream and is a fast-growing brand.â
By Kim Bhasin and Lily Meier