Having worked for both companies, I can say - adidas doesn’t have the budget to keep up with Nike in innovation.
Example:
adidas is investing in hiring a thousand low priced software developers / outsourcing IT developers to tech hubs in low income countries - to make SAP applications and try to make a decent retail application (and failing - you can’t even add items on your web store cart and have them appear in your app)….
Meanwhile Nike invests in Tech Innovation centers in Seattle, Silicon Valley, and at universities around the world. Where they focus their high priced / but more competent develops on: Customized product creation tools, developing robotics for 3D looming, redeveloping custom automation platforms for manufacturing. Working side by side with apple and Google and the owners of mobile device manufacturers to make native apps that work seamlessly.
The difference - is Nike invests in Tech innovation using high quality talent to change the process of manufacturing and quality. While adidas invests in low quality disposable IT workers to work in the confines of SAP and rudimentary systems and never get the end result right… and just spin their wheels.
This makes the tools and processes at adidas slow, always behind, never leading the industry. It creates poor work experiences for everyone, using out of date systems / never having the best compute systems and devices to have a proper digital process end to end to help aid innovation.
And this is just IT. Now take the same thing and apply it to chemistry, manufacturing, warehouse and logistics— where Nike will direct invest and adidas will try to contract to lowest bidder… and you see why the divide widens.
Adidas like to use consultants, and trust Gartner and Boston consulting, and Accenture — companies who have zero clue how to make sports ware. Nike trusts its internal experts most, and trusts people who actually participate in the sport, or know supply chain, to design for that aspect.
Adidas needs to fire the consultants, stop thinking low cost labor in India and Spain is the solution to the world of tech problems, and invest in innovative people that live in the areas their customers do, and know the issues.
Adidas as a lucky location in Oregon - where innovation for all the competition exists - yet it does NOTHING to pull talent from Nike / Columbia/ UA / Etc — and instead strangles it’s US HQ with cost cutting and rudimentary processes.
Wake up - you have your locations in the right area. Invest in your people. Stop trying to treat humans as low cost cogs in the machine —- because the machine is broken. You must build a new machine.