Photo via Fast Company
Lululemon announced the appointment of Heidi O'Neill, a longtime Nike executive, as its new chief executive officer, effective September 8. O'Neill, who spent 26 years at Nike most recently serving as president of consumer, product, and brand, replaces Calvin McDonald, who departed after six years leading the company. The move marks a significant leadership transition as Lululemon seeks to reignite momentum following a period of deceleration.
The Canadian athletic apparel company experienced explosive growth under McDonald's tenure, expanding revenue from $2.6 billion to $10.6 billion while establishing operations in 30 countries and launching into footwear. However, growth slowed to 10% last year from 19% previously, driven by tariffs, consumer spending headwinds, and missteps including a poorly received Disney collaboration. The slowdown prompted founder Chip Wilson to publish a critical full-page advertisement, raising questions about the company's strategic direction.
O'Neill's appointment reflects the board's confidence in scaling operations and driving innovation. During her Nike tenure, she oversaw a period that grew the company's revenue from $9 billion to over $45 billion. However, industry observers question whether importing Nike's playbook is the right solution for Lululemon, which historically succeeded through selective product releases, elevated brand positioning, and proprietary fabric innovation—the opposite approach from Nike's mass-market strategy.
The new CEO faces immediate challenges including rebuilding consumer trust following a sustainability campaign that highlighted the company's environmental commitments lag. O'Neill must navigate whether Lululemon's future lies in becoming bigger or better—a distinction her customers increasingly view as critical. Her ability to balance growth ambitions with the brand distinction that created the iconic $1 billion Align franchise will determine her early success.


