惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
月光博客
月光博客
IT之家
IT之家
博客园 - Franky
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
博客园 - 【当耐特】
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
罗磊的独立博客
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
博客园 - 聂微东
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
S
Schneier on Security
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
D
Docker
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
博客园 - 叶小钗
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
V
V2EX
T
Tenable Blog
A
Arctic Wolf
C
Cisco Blogs
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
Project Zero
Project Zero
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Latest news
Latest news
J
Java Code Geeks
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
T
Threatpost
L
LangChain Blog
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
腾讯CDC
I
Intezer
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org

Forbes - Retail

American Girl Names Its 2027 ‘Girl Of The Year’ As Part Of Brand’s 40th Anniversary Celebration Burberry Bets On Heritage As Americans Lap Up Hamptons Of England Look Swap Storefront Delivers 2X Conversion Rates As Brands Embrace AI-Powered Commerce InMobi’s MobileAction Deal Boosts Agentic Commerce And Global Advertising Mattel’s First ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Toys Arrive In Stores And Online ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ Lands As Luxury Fashion Fights To Pull Gen Z Into Its Orbit First Look At Primark Herald Square Manhattan Flagship Store AI-Run Store Hires Humans: What Andon Market Reveals About the Future of Retail Jobs Retail Investors Are Doubling Down And Fear May Be Driving The Rally Gen Z Discovers Apparel Shopping IRL Is Cool Barbie Styles A New Life For Herself As A Creative Director Here’s What Happened After AI Launched And Ran A Café In Stockholm Amazon Opens Its Vast Logistics Network To Every Business—Not Just Marketplace Sellers How Retailers Can Thrive With Agentic Commerce Saks May Exit Bankruptcy. Success Is The Next Question. CVS Profits Eclipse $2.9 Billion As Aetna Health Plan Costs Ease The Billion-Dollar Women’s Health Market Driving A New Endometriosis Focus Disney’s New CEO Starts With Job Cuts And A Corporate Reputation To Rebuild Miami’s Grid Proved The Catwalk As Fashion x F1 Drive Billion Dollar Opportunity Gap Co-Founder Doris Fisher, Who Clothed A New Generation, Dies At 94 Home Depot’s Orange Apron Media Targets High Intent Shoppers And Pros May The Fourth And The Rise Of The Luxury Fan The Met, The Mark And New York’s Most Watched Night The French Riviera Has Entered Its White Lotus Era Mango, The Stealth Retailer That Has Crept Up On Fast Fashion Giants Esteworld: From Cosmetic Surgery To Wellness—And The U.S. A Target Minted Doubles Profitability, Grows Retail Partnerships How Longevity Is Becoming The Wellness Industry’s New Gold Rush AI Earned The Right To Guide Shopping Decisions, But Not To Buy Altos Carves Out A Distinctive Position In The Global Tequila Market Iconic Jersey Mall Garden State Plaza Is Reinventing Itself, Again Whimsy, Wonder And Mother’s Day 2026 Consumers Won’t See Tariff Refunds. Smart Retailers Will Turn Them Into Price Cuts VF Corp CEO Pledges To Deep Brand Turnaround At Berlin Congress Henkell Freixenet Bets On Growth Segments To Reignite Sparkling Wine How Sleepmaxxing Became The Latest Status Symbol “Nesting”…Retailers Have A Gen Z Problem How Ace Hardware Employees Are Using AI To Serve Shoppers How The Garden Became The Good Place, As A $3.5 billion Market Continues To Bloom Could Rhode Island Bill Hit Aldi As It Expands New U.S. Format? California Unseals Evidence Supporting Price-Fixing Allegations Against Amazon New Michael Jackson Action Figure On The Way As ‘Michael’ Movie Mania Hits Raw Uncut Diamonds Give Jewelry Shoppers A Visible Difference Traditional Designs Can’t Match Welcome To The First-Ever Store Designed, Developed And Run By AI Louvelle Links Lenders And Renters Of High-End Fashion Lumas Tests Art’s Airport Potential With Frankfurt Terminal 3 Debut Ulta Partners With Google Gemini To Power Agentic AI For Beauty Shoppers Whole Foods Market Debuts Line Of Robert Hall Wines, The First Domestic Regenerative Organic Certified Wines On Its Shelves Parke X Target, A Match Made In Gen Z Heaven QVC Was Slow To The Shift, And Now It’s Costly To Catch Up How Coachella Became A Testing Ground For Cultural Brand Relevance How AI Agents Could Rebuild Fashion’s Visual Production Layer Waitrose To Test Airport Retailing At London Heathrow Inside Bed Bath & Beyond’s Grand Vision For An ‘Everything Home’ Ecosystem How Luxury Brands Are Quietly Leaning Into Artificial Intelligence How Prime And A Smarter Alexa Are Giving Amazon An AI Shopping Edge Fresh Fizz Organic Soda Doubles Its Retail Footprint As It Enters National Distribution With Sprouts Farmers Market QVC Chapter 11 Signals Change At Company That Once Ruled Home Shopping Google Pixel And Highsnobiety Build A Talent Pipeline For Fashion 7-Eleven To Close 645 Stores As It Races To Catch Up In Convenience Why Shakespeare And Company Feels Newly Relevant In A Digital Age A Parisian Pause In The Luxury Retail Quarter Tim Cook Has Bet On Nike But That Doesn’t Mean You Should Just Do It For Gen Z Apparel Brands, The Mall Is Fashion-Forward Hiring Lessons: Why Target Chose An Insider And Kroger Hired An Outsider For CEO First Look At New Aldi Format Set To Rollout Across The U.S. Fashion Unit Takes Middle East Hit, But LVMH Proves Resilient In Q1 When It Comes To Marketplaces, More Is Exponentially Better Neato Raises $25 Million For 2P Expansion Beyond Amazon Google, DressX And The New Fashion AI Virtual Try-On Stack Why The AI Checkout Debate Misses The Real Shift In Retail Galeries Lafayettes Paris Just Opened Europe’s Largest Beauty Destination Cantino In As New CEO While Stefano Gabbana Relinquishes D&G Chair How To Turn 'Boring' Products Into Hype Brands (According To The Co-Founders Of Hears Earplugs) How Sinead Gorey Built A Cult Fashion Brand Worn By Sabrina Carpenter Menswear In The Post-Covid Age Is High Tech And High Touch Unilever Acquires Gummies Supplement Brand Grüns For $1.2 Billion How Caviar Moved From Old Luxury To New Demand Surging Digital Art Sales Put Early Pioneers Back In The Spotlight Latest Gen Z Spend Trend: Trading Down To Glow Up Swatch Urges Shareholders To Reject Activist's Investor’s Board Bid Adidas Is Winning The Hearts And Minds Of Consumers Globally As Nike Falls Gardening’s Cultural Return Is Reshaping How Consumers Invest In Home, Health And Time American Girl Historical Characters Dolls Return For Brand’s 40th Anniversary Bed Bath & Beyond To Widen Offer In $150 Million Container Store Deal Jockey Celebrates 150 Years and Launches Limited 1876 Collection ‘Beetlejuice’ Action Figure Of Winona Ryder’s Lydia Deetz Is In The Works How Home Depot Is Harnessing Weather Data To Drive Local Retail Sales Saie And Sephora Turn Earth Month Into Collective Initiative For The Planet Irish Airport Retailer Takes Over JFK T4 Stores From LVMH-Owned DFS Brands Keep Treating Gen Z Like Younger Millennials, And It's Costing Them Resale Becomes The Fashion Industry’s New Value Flywheel How Liberation Day Has Really Changed Retail And Prices One Year On Why The Home Spa Is The New Luxury Gift This Mother’s Day How Supply Chain Disruptions Are Reshaping The Future Of Startups Walmart Caught In ESL Controversy As Legislators Move Against Digital Shelf Labels The Trillion-Dollar Experience Economy And The Growing Execution Gap Heinemann Promotes Rajshree Dugar To CEO Of Asia-Pacific Unit First Photos Of ‘Supergirl’ Movie Action Figures Take Flight WSI Seals 10‑year Retail Deal At Australia’s 1st Major Airport In 50 Years
Chip Wilson’s Five-Pillar Plan To Fix Lululemon—Working It Falls To Heidi O’Neill And The Board
Pamela N. Danziger · 2026-05-14 · via Forbes - Retail
Lululemon In San Diego

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - DECEMBER 10: A Lululemon logo is displayed outside their store at Fashion Valley, an upscale shopping mall on December 10, 2025 in San Diego, CA. (Photo by Kevin Carter/Getty Images)

Getty Images

Chip Wilson just presented a five-pillar plan to fix what ails Lululemon—a company he officially exited more than a decade ago but remains deeply invested in, both emotionally and financially with roughly 10% ownership. In his very public proxy battle to elect three hand-picked directors, Wilson is fighting for the heart and soul of the brand he created.

However, Wilson’s timing is off. On March 18, he stated that “significant change is still needed at the Board level before a new CEO can be selected.” Instead, the board moved first. In April, it announced two independent candidates to join the board—Chip Bergh, former president and CEO of Levi Strauss, and Esi Eggleson Bracey, former chief growth and marketing officer at Unilever—and appointed Heidi O’Neill, after a nearly 28-year run at Nike, as the next CEO.

With CEO succession—one of the board’s most critical responsibilities—now completed, the proxy vote on June 11 comes across as both late and unnecessarily disruptive, even though O’Neill won’t officially start until September.

Wilson clearly maps out the challenges facing Lululemon. His five-pillar plan is a valuable reminder of what made Lululemon a great brand in the first place. But it’s a top-down blueprint better suited to the entrepreneurial, fast-growth company Lululemon once was. “The solution starts with more proven, creative leaders in the Boardroom” he stated.

Yet that is where Wilson loses the plot. The company is no longer a fast-moving startup. It is a mature $11 billion global fashion business. Despite Wilson’s protestations to the contrary, Lululemon is not slipping into decline. It is in transition. Yet whether O’Neill is the right person to lead that transition remains a central question—especially after the stock dropped sharply after her announcement.

As Hawksnest Group’s John B. R. Long, author of Hire Without Ego and veteran of 30+ years of C-suite executive placement, observed:

“Chip Wilson is dissatisfied with the company’s performance in the wake of significant competition from a growing stream of new entrants, amongst many internal and external headwinds. Lululemon is a company moving from the Growth to Maturity lifecycle stage. Candidly, I doubt Chip agrees with my lifecycle stage assessment of Lulu, given his strong entrepreneurial orientation, but I’ll stick with it.”

Fix The Board To Fix Lululemon

Chip Wilson’s core assertion is that Lululemon has “lost its cool” and he puts the blame squarely on the company’s Board of Directors, none of whom he claims have creative vision or even the ability to recognize it when they see it.

“The existing Board does not have the skillset to hire a world-class brand/product person who can deliver on the newest zeitgeist or style of the moment,” he said after the latest board appointments and the O’Neill announcement.

He also takes issue with four current members of the board, including current executive chair Martha (Marti) Morfitt, being too closely aligned with Morfitt’s Advent International private equity firm. One of those members, Advent’s David Mussafer, is resigning from the board, as is Shane Grant of Colgate-Palmolive. The board’s chosen candidates, Bergh and Eggleston Bracey, will be standing for election to replace them.

Wilson, however, stated he is “underwhelmed” by Bergh and claims both Bergh and Eggleston Bracy lack the “needed experience.” He’s also said “Lululemon is not a toothpaste” brand, taking a hit at Bergh’s nearly 30 years with Proctor & Gamble.

To fill what he sees as the board’s creative void and restore Lululemon to its “preeminent status” in the premium fashion market, Wilson has put forward three candidates:

  • Marc Maurer, former co-CEO of On Holding, a global technology-enabled performance athletic footwear brand that has disrupted Nike’s leadership in the category while stepping into the independent retail space that Nike largely abandoned during O’Neill’s recent tenure.
  • Laura Gentile, chief marketing officer of ESPN, who founded its espnW dedicated platform for women’s sports.
  • Eric Hirshberg, former CEO of Activision, and deeply embedded in pop gaming culture (Call of Duty) over the course of his eight-year tenure there.

If Wilson’s candidates get the nod—Proxy Analyst puts the odds at six out of ten that some or all win a place on the board, naming Maurer as having the strongest potential—he has outlined a five-point plan to restore Lululemon back to greatness and market leadership:

“Core to more”

Wilson claims the brand has drifted from its core customer: “A woman who inspires culture, not just follows it.” The brand drift is evident in its partnership with Disney, acquisition of Mirror and the launch of footwear and small accessories, thus distracting from and eroding the brand’s premium position.

“Lululemon needs to first inspire its core customer again, and once it does, everyone else will follow,” he stated.

Obsessing over technical details

He claims Lululemon has lost its edge by cutting corners and underinvesting in R&D relative to its peers. Maurer is put forward as a board member for his experience building On Holding as a disrupter brand through “technical excellence” that redefined the “sensory experience of running.”

A similar details-driven approach would help Lululemon get ahead of recent athleisurewear brands crowding into its space, like Alo and Vuori at the premium level and the more accessible Fabletics and Gymshark.

Driving to disrupt

Setting trends, rather than following them, is what the brand needs, and Wilson slots Gentile as a board member who can help the company find ways to deliver products that are “unexpected and surprising to customers in a positive way,” unlike some recent fails.

Jefferies analyst Randal Konik said it boldly: “The core issue remains product, with assortments drifting further from LULU’s aspiration, yoga identity toward lower-quality, everyday apparel, diluting the brand and alienating the core customer.”

A culture that prioritizes experimentation and innovation

Claiming that the company has been taking “safe bets” rather than driving for breakthrough innovation, Wilson calls out Hirshberg’s experience at Activision in creative storytelling and building a corporate culture that supports the company to take “big swings without fear of failure.”

He also criticizes the company for languishing under an 18- to 24-month product development cycle, giving competitors operating on an industry-standard eight-month timeline the edge.

A Board that prioritizes and inspires creativity

This is the core component that Wilson believes is missing in the current board. “The best corporate boards are those that don’t just value creativity, but know how creativity, focus and obsessive attention to detail drive shareholder value,” he stated.

He puts forward his three candidates to fill the gap and calls out the board for not developing talent internally. “Why were 7 out of 10 most recently hired executive officers brought in from the outside?” he asked. “What is being done to shift the internal development pipeline?”

Hands-On Leadership Required

Wilson ’s five-pillar plan is on point about the principles and values that made Lululemon the great brand it is. While the company needs to recommit to these foundational principles, the board can’t do it alone. It will take the hands-on, day-to-day leadership of the management team to align employees, business processes and functions around these concepts and turn them into meaningful actions.

That responsibility rests on the shoulders of incoming CEO Heidi O’Neill. However, her arrival, set for early September, may be in limbo, if Wilson’s proposed candidates win the vote. “The proxy contest will call into question if the CEO search process should be re-examined with a refreshed Board,” he observed. Another major investor, Elliott Investment Management, with more than $1 billion in stock holdings, put forward former Coach and Ralph Lauren CFO Jane Neilsen as their choice.

Stakeholders Question The Board’s Leadership Choice

Wilson and others are not sold on the current choice. “A near 30-year veteran of NIKE, Inc. is not the symbol of transformative, creative-first leadership that can instill shareholder confidence in today’s world,” Wilson said.

He continued, “The market reaction to the appointment of Heidi O’Neill reflects shareholder frustration with the Board’s seemingly stubborn insistence on staying the course despite the challenges in the business.” Lululemon’s stock price dropped 13% immediately after the announcement and is currently trading around $125—a level it hasn’t seen since the end of 2018.

Hawksnest’s Long questions how well O’Neill’s leadership style will adapt to Lululemon’s after so many years with Nike. The main point of difference is one of scale. Nike generates four-times more revenue than Lululemon and has twice as many employees. From the outside, Nike operates under a more traditional, multi-layered hierarchical structure compared to Lululemon’s values-driven, collaborative culture.

O’Neill very successfully climbed the structured Nike corporate ladder, rising from director of marketing in 1998 to president, consumer, product and brand in 2023. Despite Needham analysts’ speculation that she was a potential CEO candidate to replace John Donahue in 2024, she’s never held a CEO position.

On a positive note, O’Neill will be only the second female Lululemon CEO after Christine Day, who served from 2008 through 2013, when Wilson led the board. However, according to Day, her more contemplative, “feminine” management style was at odds with Wilson’s “in-your-face, stick-it-to-the-man” disruptive management approach. O’Neill shouldn’t face those challenges, as the current Lululemon board is dominated by women—seven women to four men, if the board’s proposed candidates get elected.

Yet O’Neill will still face a steep learning curve to understand the business, its culture and key stakeholders. “She is stepping into a tough job as a first-time CEO and will need to build confidence and resiliency quickly,” Long said. “As I looked at her background on paper, she has all the pieces required in that role, but there remain larger questions.”

Chief among them is how deeply she was involved in shaping Nike’s pullback from wholesale—the “Consumer Direct Offense” strategy took root in 2017 when O’Neill was president, direct-to-consumer under then-CEO Mark Parker and accelerated after Donahue took the top job in 2020. At the time, O’Neill was the strategy’s public face. Initially the strategy was successful in building the DTC business, but it fractured critical wholesale partnerships, tanked the company’s valuation and ultimately led to the appointment of Nike veteran Elliott Hill as CEO.

“The question that I ask is how directly O’Neill was involved in crafting the strategy versus executing it. If she was involved in crafting it, that is a problem because the strategy did not succeed,” observed Long.

Managing Expectations

On September 8, when O’Neill steps through the door as Lululemon CEO, perhaps her biggest challenge will be managing expectations. Chip Wilson has a valid voice in the future of the company, but as Long notes, “It is unrealistic to expect a return to past levels of growth, given the intensity of competition and all the new entrants into its space.”

But as Lululemon transitions from the company’s growth to maturity phase, exponential growth and store expansion, particularly in the U.S., is in the rear-view mirror. At this stage, Lululemon must double down on business fundamentals, disciplined innovation and capitalizing on new opportunities—all of which will take time.

According to PwC, it takes two or more years for a new CEO to begin to show meaningful results and only after three to five years does the clear difference between a strong and weak leader emerge.

Given the increasing calls for Lululemon’s performance to rapidly improve—its market cap has dropped from $64.5 billion in 2023 to $15 billion so far this year, according to Traders Union—Heidi O’Neill must hit the ground running and have the full support of the board and company staff behind her to begin the turnaround.

See Also:

ForbesLululemon Hits The Wall While Fabletics Takes FlightForbesLululemon’s Next CEO Must Manage Transition From Growth To Maturity In Company LifecycleBy Pamela N. DanzigerForbesLululemon's Billionaire Founder Has Been Fighting To Oust Its CEO–He Won, But He’s Still Not HappyBy Simone Melvin