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Mark Parker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American businessman (born 1955)
For the New Zealand cricketer, seeMark Parker (cricketer).
Mark Parker
Parker in 2008
Born (1955-10-21)October 21, 1955 (age 70)
Alma materPenn State University
TitleExecutive chairman ofNike, Inc.
SuccessorJohn Donahoe
SpouseKathy Parker
Children3

Mark Parker (born October 21, 1955) is an American businessman. He is the executive chairman ofNike, Inc. He was named the third CEO of the company in 2006 and was president and CEO until January 13, 2020.[1][2] From 2023 to 2025, he was the chairman ofthe Walt Disney Company.[3]

Early life and education

[edit]

Parker was born inPoughkeepsie, New York, the son of Meg and Bruce Parker. He graduated fromWesthill High School inStamford, Connecticut[4] and later earned his bachelor's degree in Political Science atPenn State University in 1977.[5] He ran on the Penn State track and cross country teams.[6]

Career

[edit]

Parker joined Nike in 1979 as a footwear designer based in itsR&D facility inExeter, New Hampshire. He became Division Vice President in charge of development in 1987, Corporate Vice President in 1989, General Manager in 1993, and Vice President of Global Footwear in 1998.[1] Prior to becoming vice president of Nike, he was co-president (with Charlie Denson) of the Nike brand beginning in March 2001.[1] He still participates in shoe design, most notably on the Nike HTM project, creating limited edition footwear alongside Nike designerTinker Hatfield and creative consultantHiroshi Fujiwara.[7][8] He has committed to ensuring that Nike remain environmentally conscious. After 10 years of work, Parker and his team launched the first "Green Shoe" that adheres to the principles of sustainability.[9]

While CEO of Nike in 2012, Parker earned a total compensation of $15,425,608, which included a base salary of $1,609,615, a cash bonus of $594,190, stocks granted of $3,500,087, options granted of $4,199,250, and non-equity incentive plan compensation listed at $5,522,466. After being promoted to chairman in 2016, Parker's compensation tripled to over $47.6 million, $33.5 million of which came from stock rewards.[10]

In 2015, Parker was namedFortune's Businessperson of the year.[11] It was announced in June 2015 that Mark Parker is replacing Phil Knight as company chairman of Nike in 2016.[12] In 2016, he ranked 14th in theNew York Times' list of highest paid CEOs[13] with an annual paycheck of 47.6 million.[14] Parker was elected onto Walt Disney's board of directors early 2016.[15] For the2016 Summer Olympics in Rio, Parker collaborated withChristopher Marley to create an iridescent shoe.[16]

In 2017, Parker took a 71% pay cut due to a year of poor sales at Nike and the layoff of 1,000 employees.[17] Subsequently, his earnings were $13.9 million from stock and options.[18] In 2019, Parker was criticized by certain right-wing media commentators for his embrace of Nike endorserColin Kaepernick.[19] Additionally, Parker was criticized for discontinuing a special edition of their Air Max 1 Quick Strike "Betsy Ross flag"-themed sneakers.[20] In October 2019, Parker announced he would step down as Nike's CEO and become executive chairman of the company effective January 13, 2020.[21] In January 2023, he was named chairman of the Walt Disney Company, succeedingSusan Arnold.[22]

In January 2025, Parker left the board of the Walt Disney Company and was succeded by James P. Gorman, chairman emeritus ofMorgan Stanley as chairman of Disney's board of directors

Personal life

[edit]

Parker is married to Kathy Mills, a former world record holding track and field athlete whom he met at Penn State.[23] They have three grown children.[24]

Art collection

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Parker is an avid arts supporter with an extensive ongoing collection of modern,low brow and underground contemporary art, along with many other one-of-a-kind collectibles, including a cursed monkey.[citation needed] Notable artists from Parker's collection includeAndy Warhol,Adonna Khare,Mark Ryden,Todd Schorr,Natalia Fabia,Tim Biskup,Eric White,Sebastian Kruger,Charles Krafft,Glennray Tutor,Robert Crumb,Chris Mars,Sarina Brewer,[25] andMichael Leavitt.[citation needed] Parker keeps a pair ofbat-boots Nike designed forMichael Keaton to wear in the 1989Batman movie.[26] Other notable items include rare movie ephemera such as original props such asStar Wars C-3PO and models fromMars Attacks! (1996),The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) andBack to the Future (1985).[27]

References

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  1. ^abcNike website biography
  2. ^Novy-Williams, Eben (22 October 2019)."Nike Dips as It Doubles Down on Tech With Pick of Ex-EBay CEO". Bloomberg News.
  3. ^Galley, Jackie (January 11, 2023)."Disney Appoints Mark Parker As Chairman of the Board, Replacing Susan Arnold". www.wdwinfo.com. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2023.
  4. ^"Westhill's Football Team In Stamford Looks Good, Thanks To Alum At Nike". 25 September 2015.
  5. ^McGirt, Ellen (9 September 2010)."How Nike's CEO Shook Up the Shoe Industry". Fast Company. Retrieved1 November 2023.
  6. ^Jones, Riley (17 March 2016)."Nike CEO Mark Parker Was Designing Sneakers When He Was in College". Complex. Retrieved1 November 2023.
  7. ^Bustillo, Migel (May 11, 2010). "Nike Looks Beyond Its 'Swoosh' for Growth".Wall Street Journal. p. B1.
  8. ^"Nike: The Spirit Machine".032c Workshop. 032c. 20 November 2013. RetrievedDecember 10, 2013.
  9. ^CNN Feature on Nike's "Green Shoe"
  10. ^Stynes, Tess (25 July 2016)."Nike CEO Total Pay Soars".Wall Street Journal. Retrieved2016-08-29.
  11. ^"Mark Parker".Fortune. Retrieved2015-11-19.
  12. ^"Phil Knight takes steps away from Nike; will leave as board chairman".OregonLive.com. July 2015. Retrieved2015-12-08.
  13. ^Huang, Jon; Russell, Karl (2017-05-26)."The Highest-Paid C.E.O.s in 2016".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2017-10-01.
  14. ^Barrabi, Thomas (2017-07-26)."Nike CEO Mark Parker takes 70 percent pay cut in 2017".Fox Business. Retrieved2017-10-01.
  15. ^Nike CEO Mark Parker joins Disney board of directors, Portland Business Journal, 2016-01-11.
  16. ^Scott, Aaron (2015-12-11)."Oregon Artist Finds Beauty In Dead Insects (And Snakes And Birds)".OPB. Retrieved2024-02-23.
  17. ^Umoh, Ruth (2017-07-27)."Nike's CEO just took a 71 percent pay cut. Here are 5 other execs who've had their incomes slashed".CNBC. Retrieved2017-10-01.
  18. ^Garcia, Ahiza."Nike CEO takes a pay cut after rough year".CNNMoney. Retrieved2017-10-01.
  19. ^Cortes, Steve."Nike- The Left Salutes Tribalism".RealClearPolitics. Retrieved2019-07-05.
  20. ^Axelrod, Tal."Nike's Kaepernick Embrace Makes Matters Worse: CEO Daily".Fortune. Retrieved2019-07-03.
  21. ^Creswell, Julie (22 October 2019)."Nike's Chief Executive, Mark Parker, Is Stepping Down".The New York Times. Retrieved2019-10-23.
  22. ^Maas, Jennifer (11 January 2023)."Mark Parker Named Disney Chairman, Succeeding Susan Arnold; Board Opposes Nelson Peltz's Attempt to Join". Variety. Retrieved2 November 2023.
  23. ^Birchall, Jonathan (18 March 2007)."Man who made a career out of cool". Financial Times. Retrieved2 November 2023.
  24. ^Greenfeld, Karl (4 November 2015)."How Mark Parker Keeps Nike in the Lead". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved2 November 2023.
  25. ^Rivera, Erica (8 April 2016)."Crave Profile: Sarina Brewer and Rogue Taxidermy".CraveOnline.CraveOnlineLLC. Retrieved18 November 2016.
  26. ^McGirt, Ellen (September 2010)."How Nike's CEO Shook up the Shoe Industry".Fast Company.
  27. ^O'Shea, Jamie (September 2004). "Inside Mark Parker's Alternate Universe".Juxtapoz Magazine. p. 44.
Business positions
Preceded by Disney chairman
2023-2025
Succeeded by
Subsidiaries
Current
Former
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Products
Sneakers
Football boots
Footballs
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