单选题Passage Five We wouldn't
have imagined it? After years on top, Nike suddenly looks like a world-class
marathoner who, in mid-race, questions whether he's got what it takes to keep on
running. Nike's symptoms of distress: a global glut of shoes, flat sales in key
market, and declining profits. Moreover, the global brand champ that captured
its own winning corporate mindset with the "Just do it" ad slogan has a new
pitch. "I can"— to which investors seem to be restoring. "No, you can't." Losing
faith, they have knocked Nike stock from its all time high of $76 about a year
ago to a recent $46. What happened? While Nike has tripped on
fickle fashion trends and heightened competition before, its main obstacle today
appears to be its own success. Here's why: Big-brand backlash.
When he founded Nike in 1972, CEO Phil Knight contended that "if five cool
guys—the best and most popular athletes—wore his shoes, other people would want
to as well. The strategy worked wonderfully, of course, and now Nike controls an
astounding 47% of the U.S. athletic shoe market. But the brand has become too
common to be cool. "I call it the Izod syndrome." says John Horan., publisher of
Sporting Goods Intelligence, referring to the once-hip golf shirt. "Nike is
everywhere." Brand expert Watts Wacker, chairman of the consulting firm First
Matter, believes that the ubiquity of the Nike logo —the over—Swooshing of
America—turns off important core consumers, the 12-24-year-olds.
"When I was growing up: we used to say to that rooting for Yankees is
like rooting for U.S. Steel," Wacker says. "Today, rooting for Nike is like
rooting for Microsoft." The Marlboro mistake. Indeed, many
cool-conscious youngsters have gravitated to other brands such as Adidas (which
sells sneakers at lower prices) and Timberland (a leader in the outdoorsy "brown
shoes" trend). Instead of responding with hotter products or lower prices, Nike
did what many overconfident giants do (think Marlboro, pre-Marlboro Friday): It
raises its price ahead of inflation. "Retailers loaded up, but the products
weren't necessarily reaching consumers' closets," says Josie Esquivel, who
follows Nike for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. Now, Nike is paying with price
cuts—in the 50% range—last tear's models (except the irrepressible Air Jordan
line). The (Asian) economy, stupid. Nike's inventory glut is
messiest in Asia, largely because the company operates few outlet stores there.
(In the U.S. Nike sells almost half of its leftover shoes through its 41 factory
stores and the rest through discounters like T. J. Max) Also, Nike was
particularly ill prepared for Asia's economic collapse because Knight has long
believed his company's sales are recession-resistant. Management expected
revenues in Asia to almost double this year, from $1.2 billion, but retailers
canceled orders at alarming rates. It looks as though sales will rise marginally
at best. Waffling on Wall Street. Nike worsened its woes by
failing to acknowledge them soon enough. "Early last year, there was a major
crack I the day," says analyst Esquivel. "It took them over two months to say,
'Oops, we have problems." She lowered her rating on the stock from buy to hold
last May just before Nike warned that profits would fall short of expectations.
As more negative news followed, Some analysts complained that management was
hard to reach for information. One executive, CFO Robert Falcone, antagonized
major shareholders and left in January. Will Nike get back up
to speed? Probably it's one of the world's most powerful brands, and Knight is
resilient as well as smart. But the recovery will be long and painful. Knight
and his senior managers are currently working on a plan to close facilities and
reduce Nike's work force worldwide. A big restructuring charge will hit profits
hard this year, and growth will likely be slow during the few years.
In order to recover, Nike will certainly need flesh products to excite
bored consumers. "The lineup for the coming year looks OKEY," says Ralph Parks,
president of Foot Action, the second—largest athletic—shoe specialty retailer.
"It looks better than 1997's, but I'm not sure that core consumer is quite ready
to jump back in." Most important, Nike needs a new vision of
itself and its brand. This task belongs to Knight, who turned 60 a few weeks ago
and says he plans to work until he dies. That's a good thing, because the boss's
favorite motto "There is no finish line" seems more appropriate now than
ever.
单选题
In America, Nike's core consumers are ______.
A. the best footballers
B. the most popular basket ball stars
C. the 12-to-24-year old youngsters
D. the cool-conscious adults
【正确答案】
C
【答案解析】从文章第三段最后一句可知,C为正确选项。
单选题
What does the word "gravitated" mean in paragraph 3?
A. Moved gradually and irresistibly.
B. Got back to.
C. Believed.
D. Abandoned.
【正确答案】
A
【答案解析】这是一道测试词语含义的题。文中有“many cool-conscious youngsters have gravitated to other brands…”全文是讲耐克魅力减小,老主顾渐渐地被其他品牌吸引(gravitate),应选A项。
单选题
One of the mistakes Nike made in Asia is ______.
A. it has not supplied the Asia's market with enough low-priced
products
B. many Nike's own outlet stores in Asia cannot cooperate well with each
other
C. Nike's managers do not know Asia's culture
D. Nike's CEO, knight is overconfident that his company can always resist
economic collapse