In 1971 company founder Phil Knight was supplementing his modest
income from his fledgling Blue Ribbon Sports, Inc., by teaching an
accounting class at Portland State University. There he met Carolyn
Davidson, a graphic design student, who was working on a drawing
assignment in the hallway. Knight offered to pay her a couple of bucks
an hour if she would do some design work for his small company.
"Representatives
from Japan were coming for a presentation and Phil wanted some charts
and graphs to show them," recalls Davidson. "I did some design work for
him, and then one day he asked me if I wanted to work on a shoe
stripe. He said he needed more inventory control."
According to Davidson, Knight wanted a design that suggested
movement. She let flow the creative juices and came back to him with
numerous designs. None captivated his imagination.
However,
Knight was staring down a deadline. Shoe boxes in Mexico were waiting
to be printed. He needed a logo. He needed a decision. So he grabbed
her rendering of the Swoosh, telling Davidson, "I don't love it, but it
will grow on me."
Being fresh out of school with a
design degree, and hungry for work, Davidson submitted her bill for $35
for the Swoosh design. She continued to design for the newly renamed
company Nike, including ads, brochures, posters and catalogues. The
company's growth was exponential, and there came a point when her
one-person design shop was too small to handle Nike's advertising
needs. Nike and Davidson agreed it was time for a full-service ad
agency.
But the Swoosh creator didn't just ride off
into the sunset. Davidson got a telephone call one day in September
1983, inviting her to have lunch and touch base again with a few of the
people she used to work with at Nike, including Knight. When she
arrived, much to her surprise, she was greeted with a catered lunch and
was presented with a gold Swoosh ring embedded with a diamond. She also
received a certificate from Knight and an envelope containing Nike
stock.
How much stock remains a secret between Knight
and her. "The stock has split three times since I received it, so I can
definitely say that I have been well compensated for my design," she
says. "You must remember too, that this was something rather special for
Phil to do, because I originally billed him and he paid that invoice."
Davidson still lives in Portland, Oregon. She's
married, the mother of two grown sons and a proud grandmother. She
retired from graphic design after 29 years and is now pursuing varied
interests and doing the volunteer work that she couldn't do while
running her one-woman business and raising her family. One day a week
you will find her at one of her favorite places to volunteer, the
Ronald McDonald House at Emanuel Hospital.
And we're fairly certain that the Swoosh grew on Phil.
Reference: http://www.nike.com/nikebiz/nikebiz.jhtml?page=5&item=origin