Counterfeit merchandise has eroded trust in the largest online markets https://t.co/teA0nrDizC
— Hannah Godofsky (@h_thoreson) November 13, 2019
Nike will no longer sell its shoes and apparel on Amazon | Engadget https://t.co/GXI79bWYlu
— GO TO MY PROFILE (@TallGlassofStyL) November 13, 2019
"Nike Will End Pilot Project Selling Products on Amazon Site" via @spencersoper
— unsuckEBAY? (@unsuckEBAY) November 13, 2019
Interesting that as former @eBay CEO John Donahoe takes the reins at Nike, they're ditching Amazon
Note, Adidas brands are huge eBay marketplace customers$EBAY $AMZN $NKEhttps://t.co/T7OVdoDkQc
Every brand with reputation and category leadership potential should be making this decision. I am sometimes frustrated when I can’t order an item on Prime, but then I end up having so much respect for the brand for being principled. Kudos, @Nike. https://t.co/Lehl2hSdWg
— Keith Knapp (@KKnapp) November 13, 2019
BREAKING: Big news in retail. @Nike will stop selling product directly through @Amazon. Company was two years into relationship with Amazon. (w/ @spencersoper) https://t.co/Oqs0sDTM81 #SportsBiz
— Eben Novy-Williams (@novy_williams) November 13, 2019
Amazon has clearly been trying to become a bigger name in fashion - an area where it has struggled. It's been courting brands, like Calvin Klein and Chico's, to sell there. Now, Nike says it won't sell directly to Amazon anymore. Will others follow? https://t.co/I9KnlfPuE9
— Lauren Thomas (@laurenthomas) November 13, 2019
Nike are right. Amazon has not pivoted to a brand fertile environment while Nike have done a cracking job with their owned online store.
— Shann Biglione (@LeShann) November 13, 2019
Experience in e-commerce isn’t just defined by delivery times anymore. https://t.co/WSBKvpercT
I bet this will be the start of a lot of this. Think this a great moment for Shopify. https://t.co/X3tqprxKWW
— Tom Goodwin (@tomfgoodwin) November 13, 2019
Nike to pull its products from Amazon’s e-commerce platform, ending 2-year pilot program https://t.co/ZwjPbv65SF < between each streaming service hoarding exclusive content, and many retailers getting more sophisticated on direct to consumer, feels like we're de-consolidating.
— Richard Seroter (@rseroter) November 13, 2019
#ナイキ、#アマゾン での靴販売を中止に。
— 米国株 viva (@miwabamzai) November 13, 2019
アマゾン株若干下落中。#米国株 #アメリカ経済https://t.co/5I3007OuKf
Nike said it will stop selling directly to Amazon. It made the deal in 2017 in exchange for stricter policing of the gray market. https://t.co/7Pci78r2Cr
— Khadeeja Safdar (@khadeeja_safdar) November 13, 2019
Nike to Stop Selling Directly to Amazon - https://t.co/Yiqio0DvCm
— Kloud ☁️ (@_live_k) November 13, 2019
ナイキ(アメリカ)がアマゾン(アメリカ)との直接取引を中止
— lain (@lain_the_wired) November 13, 2019
長い間ナイキは、アマゾンのマーケットプレイスの怪しい業者達や彼らが出品している「胡散臭いナイキ」と、ナイキ自身が出してる「正規のナイキ」がアマゾンで一緒に扱われている事をずっと怒っていたみたいhttps://t.co/rpBkf8OCQJ
"Nike executives were unhappy with how unauthorized sellers continued to be widely available on Amazon, according to people familiar with the matter."https://t.co/AJLsAk6hL7
— Science of Hitting (@TSOH_Investing) November 13, 2019
#Brand and #CX reign in the @amazon wars. About 30% of @Nike sales are purported to come directly from #B2C, and with retail under significant pressure and the theat of #counterfeits remaining, very curious to see @Nike's next steps. @MktgScience https://t.co/PxykoJvND1
— Brian Kostantin (@BKostantin) November 13, 2019
Nike executives were unhappy with how unauthorized sellers continued to be widely available on Amazon, according to people familiar with the matter.https://t.co/rqL9dM5pX7 via @WSJ
— Arrowz (@TanArrowz) November 13, 2019
“‘Brands don’t need Amazon.... Amazon is just a traffic aggregator that reduces friction in consumption ... it doesn’t build communities.”#cmgrhttps://t.co/p2XbNC6OzP
— Rachel Happe (@rhappe) November 13, 2019
@nike Congrats on turning #JustDoIt into #JustDidIt ?️♀️ https://t.co/F1dEs0YdJg
— Shopify (@Shopify) November 13, 2019
Nike will end its pilot project selling products on Amazon site https://t.co/3LQHak5H7p via @business - interesting move from @Nike which is a very highly ranked search term on @AmazonUS (using Acorn-i Ignite search tracker) pic.twitter.com/34vl8MWq0N
— Acorn Intelligence (@acorni1) November 13, 2019
Some big brands are shunning https://t.co/pzGJZN6brK. The latest: Nike, which will stop selling its sneakers & apparel on the platform. https://t.co/jw5ZTXth10
— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) November 13, 2019
I chatted to Bloomberg about Nike's decision to pull its products from Amazon. https://t.co/T7TTuBXISK
— Neil Saunders (@NeilRetail) November 13, 2019
“Nike struggled to control the Amazon marketplace. Third-party sellers whose listings were removed simply popped up under a different name. Plus, the official Nike products had fewer reviews, and therefore received worse positioning on the site.”https://t.co/LfZ0rrg1Ft
— Ivan Maljkovic (@ivan_brussels) November 13, 2019
Nike is pulling its products from Amazon. The company's whole retail strategy is getting overhauled, and it looks like Amazon didn't make the cut.
— Kim Bhasin (@KimBhasin) November 13, 2019
Statement here: https://t.co/BY38UryZEp pic.twitter.com/LlqKZEIfNw
Nike to Stop Selling Its Products on Amazon in E-Commerce Pivot https://t.co/kcIpILKKNh
— Jesse Semchuck (@jessesem) November 13, 2019
"Nike Will End Pilot Project Selling Products on Amazon Site" via @spencersoper
— unsuckEBAY? (@unsuckEBAY) November 13, 2019
Interesting that as former @eBay CEO John Donahoe takes the reins at Nike, they're ditching Amazon
Note, Adidas brands are huge eBay marketplace customers$EBAY $AMZN $NKEhttps://t.co/T7OVdoDkQc