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 (Washington )
At Aviation Week’s recent “NextGen Ahead 2010” conference in Washington, Clay Jones, the chairman, president and CEO of avionics supplier Rockwell Collins, warned that a fiscally constrained U.S. government will not have the will to fully fund modernization of the air traffic control system. He also unveiled a proposal to keep the NextGen project from withering. Shortly before his speech, Jones outlined his plan to Aviation Week editors in a wide-ranging discussion that also touched on the defense market.

Joseph C. Anselmo
Lockheed Martin Corp. is moving to “reshape” its portfolio of businesses as it braces for leaner U.S. defense spending, stronger conflict-of-interest regulations and a move by the federal government to take back thousands of jobs that had been outsourced to contractors.

Joseph C. Anselmo
Ever since it was deregulated in 1978, the U.S. airline industry has made an art of setting money on fire. While some investors have profited from airline stocks’ wild fluctuations, many more have been burned or wiped out altogether when carriers restructured their businesses under bankruptcy protection. But a report by CRT Capital Group analysts Michael Derchin and Ben Shim are urging investors to take a fresh look at the industry as it heads into a recovery.