At least 11 Nike executives have left the company this year over complaints of an uncomfortable workplace that discriminates against women.The first to go was Nike's president, Trevor Edwards. The announcement came in mid-March that the company's No. 2 is retiring in August after more than 25 years. Edwards had been considered a favorite to succeed CEO Mark Parker.The next day, it was announced that Jayme Martin, a vice president and general manager of global categories for Nike, was no longer with the company.Surveys taken by a group of women at the company's Beaverton, Ore., world headquarters reportedly landed on Parker's desk and led the company to move swiftly. In a New York Times exposé, transgressions included company emails that mentioned women's body parts and a male supervisor cornering a woman in the bathroom.In April, five more senior leaders departed and more were reported last week. This has left some former Nike employees shocked at the reckoning and hopeful — if wary — that the company that made Portland "Sneakertown" can change.Nobody to complain toAmong the surprised is Ann Wallace. After 14 years working for the Nike information technology department, she left her role as a principal cloud security architect in January."That was a really tough decision. I didn't want to leave Nike necessarily," she says. "My whole time at Nike — I mean, the majority of it — I loved the company. I loved working there."She recalls the family dynamic she felt while working as a contractor at the Beaverton headquarters that made her determined to become a full-time employee. As an avid runner, she related to Nike's athletic mission."We're part of the Nike culture ... you would see different sports people walking around, " she says. "My first week at Nike, there was Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods. You just felt part of Nike."But then about six years ago, things changed within her department — what she describes as "a whole shift.""A new CTO (chief technology officer) came in, and he brought a lot of his friends in," Wallace says. "And a lot of women who were in upper management positions within the IT organization kind of went elsewhere, either other roles in Nike or outside of Nike."The departing women included Wallace's boss, who Wallace says had protected her staff from misogynistic behaviors within the IT organization."Certain individuals within that organization would constantly berate women, talk down to women, interrupt."And there was the trip to Las Vegas for a tech conference where she and another female colleague would be presenting. They were the only two women from the IT department to attend.The conference organized a pub crawl, and Nike rented out a restaurant on the way. Wallace and the other woman in attendance were told to chat with people when they came in. If they seemed like good job candidates, Wallace was to ask for their room number so they could send them gift bags with a Nike Fuel Band, the brand's fitness tracker."I don't feel like anyone thought through the fact that they were asking women at a tech conference, which is primarily males, who have been drinking in Vegas, for their room number," Wallace says. She and her colleague nodded and agreed but did noy follow through with the request."I didn't feel comfortable asking a random guy for his room number," Wallace says.She also didn't feel comfortable about the women who had been hired to entertain them."They weren't stripping but they did not have much clothes on, and towards the end of the event a lot of our male colleagues were drinking and dancing with them. And my co-worker and I just watched what was going on an eventually left," she says. "It was just a really uncomfortable position to be in as far as a work-sponsored event."Wallace did not report these events to anyone because she says there was no one to report to. Her superior had hired the entertainment.But she says there were other times when she reported misconduct and was told that she was being too sensitive or that it was hard to fire people."Which, at that point, gave me the feeling like nothing is going to be done," Wallace says. "I didn't feel comfortable going to employee relations about this because I'd heard of a lot of people going to them and when they would speak up, it would leak out, and I didn't want any retaliation."Despite her experiences and complaints, when the media started reporting firings at Nike, Wallace was taken aback."Things that have happened over my career at Nike I just thought was more IT, not so much Nike," Wallace says. "We know being a woman in tech is difficult so when I was reading the things that came out about Nike, I was surprised. But at the same time, (with) all the other things that have come out in the last year about the 'me too' movement, I'm not surprised either."The pros and cons of a "jock mentality"Nike CEO Parker addressed problems at the company in an apology to employees at Nike headquarters this month. For this story, Nike spokesperson Greg Rossiter emailed a statement: