The Habits That Built Nike: Knight, Bowerman and Johnson

Before Nike was a global brand, it was three men fighting chaos with daily habits that never let them quit. Phil Knight, Bill Bowerman, and Jeff Johnson didn’t just build a business, they lived the relentless routines that made it possible. This is how they did it.

INTRODUCTION

Phil Knight. Bill Bowerman. Jeff Johnson.

Three very different minds. One impossible mission.
They didn’t just create Nike, they built it from scratch through obsessive habits, weird routines, and an unhealthy amount of grit.

Forget branding and ads. In the beginning, it was one guy packing shoes, one guy melting rubber, and another guy handwriting letters to customers. Every day. Every night. No breaks. No exits.

If you want to understand what actually powers a great company, start with the people who bled for it.

PHIL KNIGHT: SHOW UP, STAY IN THE FIGHT

Habit: Relentless daily problem-solving, no matter the cost

Phil Knight didn’t have a 10-year plan. He had today’s problems, and a habit of not backing down from them.

In Nike’s earliest years, his entire day was shaped around survival:

  • Handling invoices and angry banks before breakfast
  • Writing letters to Japan during lunch
  • Packing boxes after midnight

“So much of business is just holding on.”

He didn’t journal. He didn’t delegate. He simply faced the chaos and kept moving.

Founder Takeaway: Don’t overthink. Wake up and solve the most urgent problem. Repeat.

About Phil Knight

Insight: Running Was His Reset

Running wasn’t a hobby for Knight. It was sacred.

“Running gave me clarity, it reminded me why I started.”

Even when the company was bleeding money or fighting lawsuits, he made time to run. It grounded him, cleared his head, and reconnected him with the product they were fighting to sell.

Use this: Build one habit that recenters you, a ritual that reminds you of your why when the business makes you forget.

BILL BOWERMAN: MAKE IT FASTER, LIGHTER, BETTER

Habit: Daily, obsessive product innovation, with zero tolerance for mediocrity

Bowerman didn’t care about logos or scale. He cared about speed. He was part mad scientist, part coach, part war general and his lab was a mess of melted rubber, shoe scraps, and runners’ complaints.

He tore shoes apart daily, rebuilt them from scratch, and stole his athletes’ shoes without asking, just to make them better.

“He didn’t care who you were, if you ran for him, your shoes were his to destroy.”

Founder Takeaway: Product comes first. Make something better than anyone else, and people will forgive everything else.

About Bill Bowerman

  • track coach at the University of Oregon and Knight’s former mentor. 
  • Co-founded BRS with Phil Knight in 1964, and was known for his constant tinkering with shoe design, like the famous waffle iron sole
  • A key figure in the innovative spirit of the company, pushing for excellence in athletic footwear. 

Insight: Revered and Feared, Even By Knight

Bowerman’s standards were brutal. He expected greatness, especially from Knight. He hated small talk, didn’t trust suits, and regularly called the factory directly to rip into someone.

“He scared me,” Knight admits in Shoe Dog. But he also says: “There would be no Nike without Bowerman.”

Use this: Build with people who scare you a little. It keeps you sharp.

JEFF JOHNSON: ONE LETTER AT A TIME

Habit: Hyper-disciplined customer follow-up, built before CRM existed

Jeff Johnson didn’t just sell shoes. He tracked every customer like it was a mission from God.

Before CRMs, before databases, Johnson created a handwritten tracking system for every runner he ever sold to, trained, or spoke with. He knew their shoe size, their last race time, their injury history, and whether they liked thick socks.

“He sent letters at dawn, made follow-up calls at lunch, and wrote thank-you notes after dinner.”

 Founder Takeaway: You don’t need software. You need obsession. Follow up like you actually care, because Johnson did.

About Jeff Johnson

He developed an early customer database by creating index cards for every customer, which he used to build relationships and send personalized notes, turning them into loyal fans and promoting the company through word-of-mouth. 

Hired in 1965 as the first full-time employee of Blue Ribbon Sports. 

A former runner who served as BRS’s initial sales and customer service representative, selling shoes at track meets. 

Insight: He Didn’t Scale. He Connected.

Johnson didn’t care about reaching millions. He cared about reaching one runner at a time — deeply.

He organized races. Drove to small towns. Spent hours on letters instead of ads. And it worked, runners became advocates, and loyalty grew at the grassroots.

Use this: Don’t chase followers. Build believers.

TOGETHER: TENSION, RESPECT, AND UNRELENTING DRIVE

Knight, Bowerman, and Johnson didn’t always get along. But they worked like hell.

  • Knight loved and feared Bowerman but also trusted his genius.
  • Johnson frustrated Knight with his intensity but built the base.
  • Bowerman saw Knight as soft but respected his endurance.

What they shared:

  • Obsession with athletes
  • Disgust for mediocrity
  • Discipline with no backup plan

“We didn’t have roles. We had jobs that needed doing.”

Founder Takeaway: Your team doesn’t need harmony. It needs urgency and shared obsession.

PersonDaily Habit / TraitImpact on Nike
Phil KnightShowed up daily and faced chaos head-onSurvived lawsuits, cashflow collapse, and constant existential risk
Phil KnightRunning as a mental resetMaintained sanity and connection to product
Bill BowermanRebuilt shoes daily, often without permissionCreated breakthrough designs like the Waffle Trainer
Bill BowermanBrutally high standards + no tolerance for fluffPushed team to exceed limits; feared but revered
Jeff JohnsonCreated handwritten CRM system pre-digitalBuilt loyalty through personal, scalable customer care
Jeff JohnsonObsessive follow-up with runnersConverted buyers into brand evangelists
All ThreeMission-first, ego-second teamworkBuilt trust through action, not titles

KEY HABITS THAT BUILT NIKE

FINAL THOUGHT

Nike was built by people who had no idea how to build a company but they had habits that wouldn’t let them quit.

  • Knight ran to stay sane.
  • Bowerman built products like a madman.
  • Johnson wrote letters like it was religion.

None of it was glamorous. All of it mattered.
Start with the habits. The business follows.

Go Further. See How the Story Unfolds

Want the full arc from broken startup to global brand?
Check out our companion piece: Phil Knight: The Reluctant Entrepreneur Who Built Nike, a deep dive into how Knight’s personal contradictions shaped Nike’s culture and future.

Get the Full Story

Buy Shoe Dog by Phil Knight on Amazon

Follow Further – The Incredible Journey That Built Nike

To truly understand the grit, chaos, and discipline that shaped Nike, read Shoe Dog by Phil Knight (affiliate).
It’s not a corporate success story, it’s a raw account of what it takes to keep going when nothing’s working. Every failure, every breakthrough, and the daily mindset that turned near-collapse into one of the most iconic brands on the planet.


Internal Link Also read: Phil Knight: The Reluctant Entrepreneur Who Built Nike

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