Joe Anselmo

Editorial Director, Aviation Week Network

Washington, DC

Summary

Joe Anselmo has been Editorial Director of the Aviation Week Network and Editor-in-Chief of Aviation Week & Space Technology since 2013. Based in Washington, D.C., he directs a team of more than two dozen aerospace journalists across the U.S., Europe and Asia-Pacific.

Under his leadership, Aviation Week has won numerous accolades for its in-depth reporting and deep dives into aerospace technology, including the 2017 Grand Neal award for “Top Brand/Overall Editorial Excellence,” business-to-business journalism’s equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize. Writers from the Aviation Week Network also took home six honors at the 2018 Aerospace Media Awards in London.

In 2015, Anselmo and his team spearheaded a digital initiative that provides subscribers with fresh content every day via mobile phones, tablets, or desktop computers. To mark Aviation Week’s 100th anniversary in 2016, the publication’s entire archive – more than 440,000 pages of articles, images, covers and advertisements – was digitized into a searchable online archive. Aviation Week also has accelerated its push into digital media with regular podcasts, videos, data features, infographics and eBooks.

Anselmo has more than 25 years of experience as an editor and reporter with Aviation Week, Congressional Quarterly and the Washington Post Company. He has won three Aerospace Journalist of the Year awards. A graduate of Ohio University, he was elected three times to the National Press Club’s Board of Governors, including one term as board chairman.

 

Articles

Joseph C. Anselmo (New York)
Boeing Co.’s share price rose 2% on Jan. 18, helping to push the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its highest close since mid-2008. But there was little reason to celebrate. That day, the company revealed that first delivery of its new 787 jet would slip another six months, to the third quarter of 2011, as the program recovers from an inflight electrical fire last November. If you’re counting, this is the seventh delay—some observers claim the eighth—for the 787, an aircraft originally scheduled to enter service in May 2008 (see p. 24).

Joseph C. Anselmo
Raytheon saw its share price decline 8% in 2010. It gained all of it back in the first seven days of 2011. Investors may have soured on defense stocks as budget pressure mounts in the U.S. and Europe, but some of them are having second thoughts about whether the sell-off has gone too far.

Joseph C. Anselmo (Washington)
Globalization, new technologies, fierce competition, winners and losers, beginnings and endings. There will be no shortage of interesting developments in the aerospace and defense industry this year. Here are 11 to keep an eye on.