Lululemon shareholders have elected the company’s three management-backed director nominees, formally ending a bruising proxy battle with founder Chip Wilson and clearing the way for incoming chief executive Heidi O’Neill to focus on reviving the athleisure brand. The vote, announced on June 26, 2026 following the company’s annual meeting, installed former Levi Strauss chief executive Chip Bergh alongside former Unilever marketing executive Esi Eggleston Bracey and veteran finance leader Teri List, strengthening the board with directors experienced in brand-building and corporate governance.
The result cements a settlement struck last month that brought a contentious dispute to a close. Under that agreement, two of Wilson’s nominees — former On co-chief executive Marc Maurer and former ESPN marketing chief Laura Gentile — have been appointed as independent directors, taking the board to 11 members, with a third mutually agreed director due to join by October 1. The compromise gave both sides a measure of what they sought: management secured its preferred slate through a shareholder vote, while the founder won representation for some of his candidates, defusing a fight that had become a drag on the company.
The conflict had been public and pointed. Wilson, who founded Lululemon and remains one of its largest shareholders with a stake of around 8.6%, had sparred openly with management since December, arguing the company was in urgent need of board refreshment as its performance faltered. He pressed shareholders to back his own nominees, contending they would bring the creative and marketing expertise needed to restore the brand’s momentum, and his campaign weighed on the share price through the first half of the year. The settlement and the subsequent vote bring that public confrontation to an end, although the founder’s continued board representation ensures his influence on the company’s direction persists.
The governance reset arrives at a demanding moment for the business. Lululemon’s performance has been under pressure for roughly two years, particularly in the Americas, its largest market, as it has contended with the impact of tariffs, a cautious US consumer and a product range that has struggled to excite shoppers as it once did, while newer competitors including Vuori and Alo Yoga have gained ground in a cooling athleisure market. The company reported net revenue of $11.1 billion for 2025, up 5%, but issued subdued guidance for 2026, and warned that tariffs and the proxy fight itself would weigh on results.
The board changes are designed to support a broader turnaround under new leadership. Installing directors with deep brand and consumer-retail experience, including a former chief executive of an iconic apparel company and a senior marketing leader, reflects a board positioning itself to guide a reset of the brand and its product strategy. For incoming chief executive Heidi O’Neill, the resolution of the proxy contest removes a significant distraction, allowing the leadership to concentrate on the operational and creative work of reviving demand rather than on defending the board’s composition to shareholders.
How effectively the refreshed board and incoming chief executive can reverse the brand’s slowing momentum is the question now facing the company. The settlement has bought leadership the stability to focus on execution, but the underlying challenges — competitive pressure, a weak consumer backdrop and a product line in need of renewal — remain unresolved, and the soft guidance for the year indicates how much work lies ahead. Whether the combination of governance change and new leadership can restore the growth that built Lululemon into a category leader will determine whether the truth with its founder proves to be the turning point both sides are hoping for.
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Image credit: Mike Mozart


