A declining brand inside a strong portfolio highlights a familiar supply chain decision: optimize the node, or change the operating model
A Portfolio Decision, Not a Brand Problem
Nike does not have a brand problem with Converse. It has a decision to make.
Converse has been losing ground for some time. Sales are down, investment has been pulled back, and the brand remains tied to a narrow product base that no longer carries the same weight in the market. At the same time, Authentic Brands Group has shown interest in acquiring it.
That combination is usually a signal. Not of failure, but of misalignment.
When an Asset Starts to Drift
Inside a large portfolio, most assets do not fail all at once. They drift. Performance weakens, attention shifts elsewhere, and the asset becomes harder to justify in its current form. The instinct is to stabilize it. Reduce cost. Adjust leadership. Try to recover momentum.
Nike is following that path.
But there is a second option. One that shows up often in supply chain decisions, though it is rarely framed that way.
The Supply Chain Analogy
When a node in a network underperforms, you can try to improve it where it sits. Or you can change its role in the system.
Converse looks less like a turnaround candidate and more like a node that no longer fits cleanly within Nike’s operating model. It is concentrated around a single product, lacks a strong innovation pipeline, and is not fully aligned with how demand is evolving. These are not surface issues. They are structural.
Supply chains see this pattern in different forms. A distribution center that once made sense but now sits outside the optimal network. A supplier that was once reliable but cannot keep pace. A lane that no longer supports the required service levels. In each case, the question is the same. Improve it, or reposition it.
Two Paths: Operate or Reposition
Nike is choosing to operate the asset. That means continued internal ownership, continued integration, and a requirement to restore growth within the existing structure.
Authentic Brands would take a different approach. The brand would be separated from execution. Manufacturing, distribution, and retail would be handled through partners. The asset would not be fixed. It would be redeployed.
That model is not unique to fashion. It is increasingly visible across supply chains. Some organizations continue to own and operate end to end. Others are moving toward orchestration, managing networks of partners rather than controlling every node directly.
Cost Control Is Not Structural Change
The distinction matters because it changes where value is created.
In an integrated model, value depends on how well each part performs and how tightly those parts are aligned. In an orchestration model, value comes from coordinating a network that can adapt more quickly than any single operator.
Nike’s current actions focus on cost. That is a reasonable first response. But cost control does not change the role of the asset. It keeps the system stable without addressing whether the system itself still makes sense.
Supply chain leaders see this often. Optimization is applied to a network that should be redesigned. The result is incremental improvement where structural change is required.
Where Control Is Moving
The more important signal sits above the brand itself.
Across industries, control is shifting. Away from physical ownership and toward coordination. Away from managing individual assets and toward managing how those assets work together. In supply chains, this shows up in platform models, in partner ecosystems, and increasingly in systems that optimize across networks rather than within them.
Bottom Line
The Converse question sits directly in that shift.
Nike can continue to operate the asset and work to restore its place within the portfolio. Or it can acknowledge that the asset may perform better in a different model, one built around orchestration rather than ownership.
That decision is not unique to Nike.
It is the same decision showing up across supply chains.
Operate the network, or orchestrate it.
The post Nike and the Converse Question: Operate or Orchestrate the Asset appeared first on Logistics Viewpoints.
