Case Study · Brand Tagline · 37+ Years Running

Nike "Just Do It": the three-word tagline that doubled a brand

In July 1988, Wieden+Kennedy launched a Nike campaign with three words and an 80-year-old marathoner. Nike was being out-sold by Reebok at the time. Over the next decade, Nike's US athletic-shoe share roughly doubled. The tagline has been on Nike packaging continuously since launch — 37 years and counting — and the brand has never been tempted to replace it.

TL;DR — the quick read
  • Story: In July 1988 Wieden+Kennedy ran the first "Just Do It" spot for Nike. It featured Walt Stack, an 80-year-old marathon runner, jogging across the Golden Gate Bridge. Nike was being out-sold by Reebok at the time. Over the next decade, Nike's US athletic-shoe share roughly doubled.
  • Why it matters: Three words is a hard line to write and an even harder one to leave alone for 37 years. The tagline took Nike's addressable audience from elite athletes to anyone who had ever considered going for a run, and gave the company an anchor it's never had to replace.
  • Takeaway: A tagline about the buyer (the moment of deciding to act) outlasts a tagline about the product.
  • Takeaway: Short enough to be a verb in normal speech. If people will say it without quoting it, you have something.
  • Takeaway: The discipline of leaving a tagline alone for decades is the part most brands skip and most pay for later.
STAR framework

Just Do It — the four-step story

S
Situation
Reebok was outselling Nike
In 1987 Reebok had taken share leadership in US athletic shoes by winning the aerobics-and-fitness wave Nike missed. Nike's brand spoke to elite athletes; the bigger market of casual exercisers had moved to Reebok.
T
Task
Talk to people who weren't athletes yet
Reach the bigger audience — people thinking about starting to run, lift, or train — without losing credibility with the serious athletes who already wore Nike.
A
Action
Launch "Just Do It" with an 80-year-old runner
In July 1988, Wieden+Kennedy launched the campaign with a TV spot of Walt Stack, an 80-year-old marathoner, jogging across the Golden Gate Bridge. Three words. No product features. No specs. Just the moment of deciding to start.
R
Result
Share doubled over the next decade
Nike's US athletic-shoe share went from about 18% in 1988 to about 43% by 1998. The tagline has been in continuous use for 37+ years and has never been replaced.
By the Numbers

Just Do It at a glance

0 words
Tagline length
Short enough to land in normal conversation
Source: Nike brand archive
0+ yrs
In continuous use
Since July 1988. No replacement, ever.
Source: Nike brand archive
0%
US shoe share in 1988
Pre-Just Do It. Reebok was leading the category
Source: Industry trade reports
0%
US shoe share by 1998
Roughly doubled in the decade after the tagline launched
Source: Industry trade reports
0
Age of the first spot star
Walt Stack, marathoner on the Golden Gate Bridge
Source: Nike first TV spot, 1988
$0B+
Nike FY2024 revenue
One of the largest consumer brands in the world
Source: Nike investor relations

Quick facts

BrandNike, Inc.
Tagline launchJuly 1988
AgencyWieden+Kennedy (Dan Wieden, co-founder)
First hero spot"Walt Stack" — 80-year-old marathoner on the Golden Gate Bridge
US athletic-shoe share (1988)~18%
US athletic-shoe share (1998)~43%
Origin of the phraseDan Wieden, reportedly inspired by Gary Gilmore's 1977 last words ("Let's do it")
Years in continuous use37+
Honest note
The market-share figures (about 18% in 1988, about 43% by 1998) are widely reported in business press and historical accounts and are directionally accurate. Isolating the contribution of the tagline from product (Air technology, Air Jordan), athlete signings (Michael Jordan in 1984), retail-channel restructuring, and international expansion is not possible cleanly. The tagline was a central enabling asset, not the sole cause.

Where Nike was in 1987

By 1987 Reebok was beating Nike in the US athletic-shoe market. Reebok had ridden the aerobics-and-fitness wave Nike was late to enter, and its product mix had broader appeal to casual exercisers and women. Nike's historical strength was elite performance running — a smaller, more specialized audience.

The strategic problem facing Phil Knight wasn't product quality. Nike Air technology was differentiated. The brand had credibility with serious athletes. The problem was audience: Nike spoke convincingly to people who already ran, lifted, or trained competitively, and had no message for the much larger group of casual exercisers and aspirational athletes who actually bought most athletic shoes.

The campaign

Wieden+Kennedy was a young Portland agency at the time. Dan Wieden pitched "Just Do It" for the 1988 multi-spot campaign. The first hero spot featured Walt Stack, an 80-year-old San Francisco marathoner, jogging shirtless across the Golden Gate Bridge with the line in voice-over. The unstated message was hard to miss: if Walt can, what's your excuse?

The tagline did three things at once in three words:

  • It widened the audience. "Just Do It" doesn't require you to already be an athlete. It speaks to the moment of deciding to start — which is the moment when casual buyers actually make athletic-shoe purchase decisions.
  • It made Nike a motivational brand, not a product brand. The line is about the buyer, not about Air cushioning. That repositioned Nike from a feature-led performance brand into the category leader for the entire athletic-aspiration market.
  • It worked for every sport and every demographic. The same three words fit a marathon, a basketball court, a yoga mat, a child's first soccer game. The line didn't lock Nike into any one category, which is what let the brand expand globally and across sports for the next three decades.
Why three words matteredTagline length tracks how well the line travels. Long taglines compete with the product for attention. Short taglines become part of everyday speech — people use them in conversation, write them on t-shirts, repeat them without quoting Nike. "Just Do It" is short enough to be a verb in normal English. That's rare, and it's the thing competitors have struggled most to copy.

What grew, and what came with it

In the decade following the 1988 launch, Nike's US athletic-shoe market share roughly doubled. Multiple things contributed — Michael Jordan had signed in 1984, the Air Jordan line launched and expanded throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, Nike pushed hard into international markets, and the retail channel reshuffled in Nike's favor. The tagline didn't do this alone. But every credible account places "Just Do It" as the central brand asset that enabled the decade of growth.

The cleaner argument: Reebok's share advantage in casual and aerobics segments did not survive the decade. By the late 1990s Nike had become the default global athletic brand, and Reebok's competitive position had eroded. The tagline didn't cause that on its own, but it was the lever that opened the broader audience Nike needed to win the category.

Why the line has lasted 37 years

  • The line is about the buyer, not the brand. "Just Do It" doesn't age because it describes a universal human moment. Product features get dated; the moment of deciding to start does not.
  • It works in any format. 30-second spot, 6-second YouTube bumper, billboard, t-shirt, social caption, packaging. The line fits every container without modification.
  • It survives leadership change. Nike has had multiple CEOs since 1988. Every CMO who took the job inherited the line and chose to keep it. That discipline is rare.
  • It tolerates real positions. The 2018 Colin Kaepernick spot used "Just Do It" as the closing line. The tagline supports the brand taking stances without forcing them.
  • Nike has never replaced it. The discipline of leaving a working tagline alone for nearly four decades is itself the thing competitors can't copy easily. Most brands replace their lines every 5-10 years and lose the cumulative equity.

How RGM thinks about taglines

When clients ask us to write them a tagline, we usually push back. Most brands don't need a tagline. They need a clear positioning statement that everyone in the org can repeat. A tagline written without that underlying clarity is reliably mediocre, and changing the line every two years doesn't fix the underlying problem.

"Just Do It" works because Nike's positioning underneath it — the motivational brand for everyone who wants to act on their athletic aspirations — was clear enough that three words could carry it. The line is the tip of the iceberg. The strategic clarity below the waterline is what actually does the work. If you don't have that clarity, no clever line will save you. If you do, you might not even need a tagline at all.

Frequently asked questions

Where did the phrase "Just Do It" come from?

Dan Wieden, co-founder of Wieden+Kennedy, is credited with the line. He has publicly said the phrase was partly inspired by Gary Gilmore's last words before his 1977 execution ("Let's do it"). The phrase was workshopped and refined into the form used for the 1988 campaign launch.

Why did the Walt Stack spot work?

Casting an 80-year-old marathoner inverted every athletic-shoe-ad convention of the 1980s, which was full of young elite athletes in studio settings. The honesty and unspectacular framing made the message read as a universal truth rather than as aspirational marketing. The "you have no excuse" implication landed harder because nobody said it out loud.

Has Nike ever stopped using the tagline?

No. It has been continuously used on packaging, advertising, and brand assets since 1988. Some campaigns lean into it harder than others, but the line has never been retired.

Did the 2018 Colin Kaepernick spot use "Just Do It"?

Yes. The 30th-anniversary "Just Do It" campaign featured Kaepernick with the line "Believe in something. Even if it means sacrificing everything." The Nike tagline closed the spot. The campaign generated significant controversy and sustained business growth in the months that followed.

Could Nike replace the tagline today?

Technically yes. Commercially almost certainly no. The cumulative equity in "Just Do It" is measured in billions of dollars of marketing investment and 37 years of cultural penetration. Replacing it would destroy that asset and hand the next line a near-impossible job.

Sources & references

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