Alex Penunuri Profile picture
Aug 19 13 tweets 4 min read Read on X
In 2012, Adidas paid $150 million to sponsor the London Olympics and expected to dominate the marketing scene.

But Nike came up with a genius strategy to steal the show.

The result? Most people thought Nike was an official sponsor.

How Nike outsmarted Adidas at the Olympics: Image
In 2012, the Summer Olympics was hosted in London.

Adidas won the title sponsorship of the event by bidding $150M.

They saw this as the perfect chance to outshine Nike.

But the story took a different turn… Image
As the official sponsor, Adidas was everywhere.

They had extensive advertising space throughout the city, in Olympic venues, and on television.

Pop-up stores, commercials, athlete meet-and-greets, etc

But Nike wouldn’t just stand by and watch… Image
There was a problem for Nike.

The Olympics has strict rules around sponsorship.

Non-sponsors are prohibited from associating themselves with the Olympics in any way.

So what did Nike do?
They needed to find a way to bend the rules without breaking them.

So they came up with a series of bold and clever marketing tactics.

Let’s break it down:
Alternative Londons

Since Nike couldn’t use London, UK in their commercial, they shot their campaign in other "Londons" around the world.

London Gym
London, Ohio
Little London, Jamaica

This allowed Nike to associate with the Olympics without breaking any rules. Image
Athlete Sponsorship

Nike sponsored around 400 Olympians.

They provided the athletes with a distinct type of shoe called “Votl”.

They used the colors yellow and green to ensure the brand stood out on the tracks. Image
Focusing on the Average Individual

Most Nike commercials featured big celebrities and athletes.

But in 2012, they decided to switch things up.

Instead of focusing on elite athletes, Nike crafted a campaign showing everyday people striving for greatness.
They created the legendary commercial “Find Your Greatness”.

This idea resonated with a broad audience worldwide.

Nike understood something that Adidas didn’t:

Winning the fans meant winning the game.
The result?

They dominated the marketing scene.

A survey found 37% of people recognized Nike as an official sponsor.

Only 27% correctly identified Adidas as a sponsor.

There’s a key learning here: Image
If you’re at a disadvantage, you need to put in the extra work.

Nike didn’t sit there and play by the rules.

They found ways to work around their limitations.

If Nike had stuck to their standard playbook, they wouldn’t have reached the same level of success.
This is a principle I apply daily in my own business.

I run a cold DM agency.

It’s not sexy or glamorous like other marketing approaches.

But because I constantly innovate and refine my strategies to stand out…

We get our clients deals worth 10,000s of dollars every month.
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More from @penunurialex

Sep 26
This guy exposed the psychology behind why you buy things you don’t need.

His name is Dan Ariely.

Apple, Amazon, and Nike use his 8 principles to dominate their markets.

Here they are, and how you can use them to influence others: Image
Dan Ariely is a professor at Duke University.

One of his biggest insights?

Humans are irrational creators.

However, we follow predictable patterns that can be studied and understood.

Understand these patterns, and you can influence anyone.
1. The relativity illusion

Let’s start with the first one - relativity.

We’re terrible at evaluating things on their own.

That’s why we don’t determine the worth of something in isolation.

We compare them with what’s nearby.
Read 16 tweets
Sep 19
The man who mentored both Elon Musk and Steve Jobs:

Larry Ellison.

He taught them a blueprint for success that made them over $400 billion.

Here’s the blueprint: Image
Larry Ellison, the founder of Oracle, isn’t your typical CEO.

He’s the “bad boy” of tech - dating models, racing cars, playing extreme sports.

He was the inspiration for Robert Downey Jr.'s Tony Stark.

And his approach to business is just as bold and unconventional.
Be Visionary but Practical

Ellison taught Musk & Jobs to dream big but be realistic.

It’s easy to fantasize, but executing is the hard part.

A big vision is nothing without a plan that includes real, actionable steps.
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Sep 16
High performers are 100x better at making decisions than the average person.

Elon Musk. Jeff Bezos. Warren Buffett.

After months of research, I found their secret ingredient.

The Billionaire Decision-Making System: Image
We make 100s of decisions every day.

And every choice you make shapes the direction of your future.

The stakes are higher for billionaires like Musk, Bezos, and Buffett.

But the principles they use can apply to anyone.

Here’s how:
Know What You Optimize For

What’s considered a good decision is subjective.

Spending 10 hours/day on video might be bad for you.

But for a professional gamer? It’s the best use of their time.

Know your goals. Filter every decision through your long-term vision.
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Sep 12
The most underrated CEO in the world:

Tim Cook.

Steve Jobs built Apple from $5 billion to $350 billion.

Tim Cook took over in 2011 and grew it to over $3.4 trillion in just 12 years.

Here’s how he turned Apple into the most successful company in the world: Image
When Tim Cook became the CEO of Apple in 2011, it was worth $350 billion.

He’s often seen as the man who simply carried Jobs’ legacy.

But that couldn’t be further from the truth.

Tim Cook has taken Apple to heights that were unimaginable even during Jobs’ time.
When he stepped into the role of CEO, the world was watching closely.

Following in the footsteps of a legend like Steve Jobs was no easy task.

Everyone doubted if he could keep Apple’s momentum.

The pressure was immense.
Read 17 tweets
Aug 29
2 years ago, I was burned out and stuck in a field I hated.

Today, I run an online business - living a life I enjoy.

And it’s all because I stumbled across an entrepreneur who changed my life:

Peter Thiel.

Here are 11 of his greatest ideas to help you build wealth and live the life you want:Image
1. Competition is for Losers

"Rivalry blinds you to new opportunities."

In business, obsession with competitors often leads to tunnel vision.

Instead of innovating, you end up copying.

But true progress comes from exploring new paths and ideas.
2. "Each moment happens once."

Each moment in business is unique.

There will only ever be 1 Bill Gates, 1 Warren Buffet, 1 Mark Zuckerberg.

Stop trying to imitate exactly what the great did.

Learn their principles and adapt to your situation.
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Aug 26
Jeff Bezos is a big believer in Second Order Thinking.

Not just Bezos — Elon Musk, Warren Buffet, and Steve Jobs too.

Here's what it is, how to use it, and become better at it: Image
Anyone can anticipate the immediate results of their actions.

And most people stop there.

But the world is complicated.

What looks like a good decision now might be a mistake later.

What seems like a win at first might be a loss down the line.
Second-order thinking is thinking beyond the obvious.

Instead of stopping at the immediate consequence of our decisions…

You dig deeper.

You consider the consequences of those consequences. Image
Read 14 tweets

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