Ryan Lochte – A Long and Arduous Road to Redemption

Ray_CasasBy Ray Casas, President, Wragg & Casas Strategic Communications

Ryan Lochte has a chance at redemption – Americans love to forgive their fallen heroes.  But he’s made it much harder by his repeated lies and by leaving his teammates behind to fend for themselves.The Lochte fiasco proves once again that in the public’s eye, the cover-up often is worse than the crime. To their credit, the sponsors who dropped him did so only after he lied a second time about the gas station incident and video evidence of the facts surfaced.A celebratory drunken night out on the town after two weeks of intense pressure to excel at the pinnacle of sports competition?  Not good, but (wink, wink) boys will be boys.  The robbery at gunpoint explanation?  A terrible mistake, but one that a quick mea culpa with an offer of restitution might have overcome.But when Lochte came back to the U.S. without his teammates and continued to insist on the robbery fiction as the facts were coming to light, he made the sponsors’ decisions all but automatic.  It’s one thing to be a victim even of your own medal-fueled hubris.  It’s altogether different to fly away to safety while others can face criminal charges in a situation made graver by your attempt at a self-serving explanation.Ryan Lochte – A Long and Arduous Road to RedemptionNow what?Speedo, Ralph Lauren and Syneron-Candela have rightly positioned themselves on the side of truth, honor and the American Way, and they can’t back off from those positions anytime soon.So Lochte must now begin the arduous, thankless task of rehabilitating his image.  Years of charity work.  Children’s causes. When the time is right, a published “What I’ve Learned” piece accompanied by public humility.  And practice, practice, practice.  Winning, winning, winning.If he remains an international champion, and after a suitable time has passed, his sponsors, or their competitors, will judge that the positives outweigh the negatives.He’ll pick up endorsements once again.  But they will keep him on a very tight leash.   [author]About the Author: Ray Casas, president of Wragg & Casas Strategic Communications has managed communications services for multi-national companies, large real estate developers, banks, food companies, attorneys and other professional firms and hospitals for more than 30 years. Casas’ areas of expertise include strategic planning, issues management and crisis counseling. [/author]

Paul Kontonis

Paul is a strategic marketing executive and brand builder that navigates businesses through the ever changing marketing landscape to reach revenue and company M&A targets with 25 years experience. As CMO of Revry, the LGBTQ-first media company, he is a trusted advisor and recognized industry leader who combines his multi-industry experiences in digital media and marketing with proven marketing methodologies that can be transferred to new battles across any industry.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/kontonis/
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Repairing the Lochte Brand: Three Things He Has Going for Him