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Received yesterday โ€” 20 July 2025

Nike salaries revealed: How much the retail giant pays designers, software engineers, and other tech workers

20 July 2025 at 09:56
Nike CEO Elliott Hill
CEO Elliott Hill is leading Nike in its efforts to boost revenue.

Jose Juarez/AP Photo

  • Salary data suggests that sportswear giant Nikeย has invested in tech and product jobs as it stages a comeback plan.
  • CEO Elliott Hill said Nike is focused on revitalizing its brand through culture, product, and marketing.
  • Work visa data shows how much the company pays for some roles in software, design, and other tech jobs.

As Nike tries to mount a comeback and live up to its reputation as a dominant retail force, the sportswear giant appears to be investing in some tech and design jobs.

Publicly available work visa data, which companies are required to disclose to the US Department of Labor, gives an idea of how much Nike's employees bring home and some of the roles it has invested in.

Nike had about 890 open positions worldwide listed on its jobs board as of July 18.

Current CEO Elliott Hill, who rejoined the company in October, has told investors that Nike is aligning its employees to focus on five key action areas: culture, product, marketing, marketplace, and connecting with consumers on the ground in their communities.

That strategy plays into Nike's efforts to focus its marquee brands โ€” Nike, Jordan, and Converse โ€” on key sports such as running and basketball.

"We are in the midst of realignment at Nike," Nike said in a statement to Business Insider. The realignment and sport strategy aim to "create sharper distinction and dimension" for its brands, the company said.

Here's what some key Nike roles can earn based on data through the quarter ending in March.

The salary data includes information from Nike Inc. and some subsidiaries, such as its retail services arm and Air Manufacturing Innovation division. It reflects US-based roles and, given it's based on H1-B visa disclosures, tends to skew more tech-focused.

Data and engineering roles: Software engineers can earn more than $300,000

Software Engineer: $146,383 to $172,661 a year

Software Engineer II: $156,641 to $172,780 a year

Software Engineer III: $139,845 to $192,227 a year

Senior Director, Software Engineering: $301,378 a year

Data Engineering: $99,123 to $265,466 a year

Data Analytics: $114,600 to $163,985 a year

Design roles: Some designers make around $100,000

Materials Designer: $100,000 a year

Senior Digital Product Designer: $126,617 a year

Senior 3D Designer: $91,707 a year

Manager roles: Managers can take home more than $270,000

Senior Manager, Software Engineering: $273,156 a year

Delivery Excellence, Uniform Operations Manager: $164,439 a year

Product Manager: $154,577 to $204,753 a year

Manager, Data Engineer: $168,031 to $213,190 a year

Senior Program Manager: $147,434 a year

Supply Chain Intelligence Manager: $158,311 a year

Read the original article on Business Insider

Received before yesterday

These are the hardest companies to interview for, according to Glassdoor

26 April 2025 at 16:09
stressed woman
The toughest job interviews usually have multiple rounds.

Natee Meepian/Getty Images

  • Tech giants are known for their challenging interviews.
  • Google, Meta, and Nvidia top the list of rigorous interviews with multiple rounds and assessments.
  • But tough questions show up across industries, according to employee reports on Glassdoor.

It's tough to break into high-paying companies.

Google is notorious for having a demanding interview process. Aside from putting job candidates through assessments, preliminary phone calls, and asking them to complete projects, the company also screens candidates through multiple rounds of interviews.

Typical interview questions range from open-ended behavioral ones like "tell me about a time that you went against the status quo" or "what does being 'Googley' mean to you?" to more technical ones.

At Nvidia, the chipmaking darling of the AI boom, candidates must also pass through rigorous rounds of assessments and interviews. "How would you describe __ technology to a non-technical person?" was a question a candidate interviewing for a job as a senior solutions architect shared on the career site Glassdoor last month. The candidate noted that they didn't receive an offer.

Tech giants top Glassdoor's list of the hardest companies to interview with. But tough questions show up across industries โ€” from luxury carmakers like Rolls-Royce, where a candidate said they were asked to define "a single crystal," to Bacardi, where a market manager who cited a difficult interview, and no offer, recalled being asked, "If you were a cocktail what would you be and why?"

The digital PR agency Reboot Online analyzed Glassdoor data to determine which companies have the most challenging job interviews. They focused on "reputable companies" listed in the top 100 of Forbes' World's Best Employers list and examined 313,000 employee reviews on Glassdoor. For each company, they looked at the average interview difficulty rating as reported on Glassdoor.

Here's a list of the top 90 companies that put candidates through the ringer for a job, according to self-reported reviews on Glassdoor.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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