London


19
May 15

Speciality public relations, with Clifford Beal

DC-3

Today we visited the Royal Aeronautical Society, where that toy above was on display. We met with Clifford Beal of Strix Consultancy. He’s a Vermont man, by way of Sussex, who is a former editor of Jane’s Defence Weekly and has worked closely with Raytheon for years. Strix is essentially a boutique public relations firm, providing strategy and extra PR hands (primarily) to weapons manufacturers.

This was a great meeting. I took a lot of notes.

Beal talked about the need for building relationships, every boutique firm talks about this. But he has a few points that stand out from the rest.

“My clients create serious products that often have life and death consequences. That sets them apart from other industries.”

One of the challenges they face is that there are often hostile perceptions of arms manufacturers. Historically, he said, that changed briefly during WWII “because that was the good war,” and then reverted. Those perceptions have large and small implications. For example, Beal said that robotics and drones are words that aren’t used anymore. Instead, the acronym UAV is employed. Similarly, the term “cluster bombs” posses an “emotive language that removes credible debate.”

Beal said it can be difficult to conduct a PR campaign or share a message against such a bow wave of public opinion. (Sound familiar to anyone in PR?) But there are good arguments. The economics of scale involved in the weapons industry makes production cost prohibitive. There’s the legitimate self defense aspect that each sovereign government would maintain. And the U.S. and U.K., he says, have the toughest export regulations in the world.

“You can’t just ship to anyone.”

Another challenge, though, is that all of the aeronautic agencies clients are governments. They often have a limited need for public relations at the national level. Locally, that’s a different game. There are work force/private sector concerns, employee safety issues and, of course, the environment. The clients and audiences are demanding different things there. But at the national level the topics are things like costs to taxpayer, cost to profit and safety and reliability.

So we talked about the F-35 boondoggle right there.

Beal looks at from the idea of talking to people directly to help guide or even turn an opinion. This is about helping to influence outcomes, but he’s taking this from a macro level.

“The media is a megaphone to your audience, not an end to itself. It is a conduit to decision makes. When it is done right, it will provide your message from a different corner,” he said.

We got started on a topic of useful tools and he said, straight up, “I wouldn’t include press releases any more.”

And my guess is you’re going to hear more of that in the coming years.

The inverted pyramid and subsequent style still holds, but the delivery has changed. This is about storytelling, which is what we’ve been telling our students for some time now.

Obviously social media is a part of the recipe now, but Beal said that aeronautics agencies, generally conservative creatures, are behind in that realm. There are control issues over subject matter. That makes sense, particularly in those very sensitive areas in which they often work. Because of that, he said, it is often stage-managed and not spontaneous.

Beal is a big believer in a successful network of contacts. This makes sense, it his defined his last decade-and-change worth of work at Strix. But that’s on the B-2-B side. He talked about the B-2-J side, specifically.

“Journalists are now under much more (time) pressure. They’re not going to give you a lot of time if they don’t know you, or until it is a really big story.”

The networking, he said, “gives you an incredible amount of good will. Bring them along from the beginning of the story, not just during the crisis.”

And then we got into the part of the media that applies to people working in aeronautics or corporate banking or non-profit PR. We talked of the many media channels now available, and how that fragmentation presents a challenge. This is the professional material and the guys sitting at home pecking away.

“You have to cultivate, pay attention to them as well … Each channel has its own ways of doing things. You have to tailor your message for each of them.”

Hmmm. Where have I said that before?

That’s not just in how they present media, though, but in what they’re looking for and, of course, what they’re asking about. The trade publications, Beal said “are asking questions that execs might not want asked.” Those trade pubs, though, (Remember, the guy was the editor at Jane’s. He knows what is going on here … ) are “reaching two different levels, but you have to reach both to be effective.”

He talks about a colonel or a major who is reading all of these trade pubs and then flagging the important material for general officers, where some real impact is being made. So if you think of it as middle- and upper-management, you have a lot of people to hit in one message, if you want to be successful.

Also, Beal said, those trade pubs know weaknesses and are being primed by plenty of other potential sources. Broadcasters, meanwhile, are looking for news hooks. Papers, the high end products at least, are often the outlets that “influence decision makers. They are noticed at a high level.”

Generally, though, in journalism, he is encountered by the same industry problems that we regularly bemoan. There is a continual decline in resource knowledge and institutional history. There are, he said, fewer defense correspondents and far fewer war correspondents than once upon a time. So often he is having to peddle Widget 101 to a general journalist. Of course, from his point of view, there are plenty of potential PR wins in a circumstance like that.

We discussed the future outlook of the weapons making industry, including budget crunches, technology costs and increasing development time and technology transfer offset trading. He had a few pointed geopolitical ideas about that topic.

He also talked about entering global public relations, generalized the quality of media across different regions of the planet and, of course, closed with the timeless nugget of crisis communication.

“If something went wrong and it was your fault, say so. Say so.”

So, yes, if there are typos above. They’re mine. Sorry.

Here, now, is another model on display at the Royal Aeronautic Society. And it is not a Manriot plane, but actually the Fokker Spin.

Fokker Spider


16
May 15

Stonehenge

It is smaller than you’d imagine. You can get closer to it than you think. And aside from the other people and the ropes and whatever curious, cosmic thing the location was doing to my camera lens, this isn’t a bad little atmospheric video:

Here we are:

Stonehenge

Nearby are early Bronze Age burial mounds, knowns as Cursus barrows. The people buried in those mounds lived a few centuries after the stones were put in place. A huge earthwork enclosure was built about a millennia before the stones were raised. You can walk the Cursus enclosure, and if you figure out their purpose, you’ll be the first one. No one knows for sure why the early Neolithic people put in the effort.

If you know how to look for it, you can see the Avenue, which are parallel banks of ditches. It links Stonehenge to the river Avon. (One of the four Avons, as we learned in the previous post‘s video.) The Avenue was put into place around 2300 BC, around the time the bluestones were being rearranged. The part nearest the stones are still low earthworks, the rest are plowed flat. The section lines up nicely with the midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset.

Click to embiggen this one in a new browser tab:

Stonehenge

The ruins you and I know are several different stages of work, starting about 5,000 years ago, with the big circle. A few centuries passed before the sarsen stones were placed in the horseshoe and then a circle with the bluestones put between them. Some time later the bluestones were rearranged. Some have fallen since then, some have been removed. Then, during the middle of the 20th century some were reinstalled during a 45-year restoration project.

Cowslip flowers are all over the region:

Stonehenge


16
May 15

The Roman Baths

Still in Bath, at the historic feature that defines and named the town. The touring here is almost entirely indoors. You need more time than we were allowed, to be honest. And the design of the tour, which is 100 percent determined by the historical plumbing, is not conducive to the number of people they let inside at one time.

If you’re interested in the history of the Romans in Britannia, this is a great place to come, but do it during a slow period. The foot traffic was all but intolerable.

Nevertheless, there is plenty to see here. You first get a view of the famous bath from above. And you’re told to not drink, swim, dive, touch, lick, perspire in, think about or wink at the water. But you can go right up to it, later in your self-guided tour.

Best part of the tour:

There are statues of the Roman governors of the province of Britannia. Mixed among them are likenesses of Roman emperors with particular connections to Britain. I’d like you to meet them now.

This is Julius Caesar. He invaded Britain twice: in 55 and 54 BC. The first time it was late summer, and less than a full-scale move. It was unsuccessful, giving him no more than a beachhead toehold at Kent. During his second visit the Romans installed a king friendly to Rome, but there wasn’t a lot of territory conquered. There were between one and four million people in Britain at the time.

Here’s the emperor Claudius. The Roman conquest started under his reign, in 43 AD. Literature and monuments suggest he won with minimal bloodshed. The locals were already beaten.

That brings us to Vespasian, who fought for Claudius before, a few decades later, oversaw the Roman expansion in the modern British Isles.

Here’s Ostorius Scapula, a Roman general who governed Britain from 47 until his death five years later. He was more of a tactician than a politican, and is thought to be buried somewhere nearby in Wales, where much of his military campaigning took place.

Suetonius Paulinus came to power as governor in 58 and his first two years on the job were considered successful. He was the lead man for more than a few battles, perhaps the largest being when he stood with an army of 10,000 Romans against a mob of Britons estimated at almost a quarter-million strong. The Romans and their discipline won, and won big. Some 400 Romans were killed, compared to reports of almost 80,000 of the locals. It turned into a slaughter.

He was, perhaps, too good at his job as a military governor. The Romans took him out of the job, fearing that his fighting would lead to stronger and more bitter resistance.

Julius Agricola was given a military command in Britain, where his military career had also started. When it ended in 73, he was made patrician in Rome and appointed governor of Gallia Aquitania. In 77 he was tapped as consul and governor of Britannia and he completed the conquest of what is now Wales and northern England. He marched on the far northern territories of Scotland and established forts across much of the Lowlands. He went home in 85. He died eight years later at the age of 53.

Here’s Hadrian, emperor from 117 to 138. He rebuilt the Pantheon and constructed the Temple of Venus and Roma. Perhaps you’ve heard of Hadrian’s Wall, which marked the northern limit of Britannia. He visited in 122, after hearing of a revolt there in the previous years. but never saw that wall finished. He went off to fight some rebels in Africa and then visited his beloved Greece, then Asia and then Egypt and finally back to Rome in 133, ending the ultimate road trip. He never returned to Britain.

Which brings us to the last statue, of Constantine the Great. He was the Roman Emperor from 306 to 337 AD. As a younger man he fought north of Hadrian’s Wall. His dominion consisted of Britain, Gaul, and Spain. He therefore commanded one of the largest Roman armies, stationed along the important Rhine frontier. He founded Constantinople, of course, and also stopped Christian persecutions and legalized Christianity. In 325 he summoned the famous Council of Nicaea.

The Temple pediment is one of the highlights of the Bath tour, and it is one of only two truly classical temples from Roman Britain. An animation shows how the pediment would have looked in Roman times.

The pediment features the image of a fearsome head carved in Bath stone and it is thought to be the Gorgon’s Head which was a powerful symbol of the goddess Sulis Minerva.

Inside the temple you would have found the statue of the goddess Sulis Minerva. The gilt bronze head is one of the best known objects from Roman Britain. The head may well date from the first century AD. There are six layers of gilding. The first two use a technique known as fire gilding and the four later layers are applied as gold leaf. There is corrosion which has affected it in parts where it lay in the ground for over a thousand years. And you can also see a rectangular cut beneath the chin, thought to be a repair from a casting flaw.

The Bath from ground level. I just imagine Roman lifeguards yelling “No running on the deck!”

The engineering is impressive, still in operation and the tour lets you see some fine examples of Roman handiwork and ingenuity. There are plenty of video screens and dioramas trying to explain life in Roman Britannia. There are tin scrolls where people wrote out curses against those that wrong them. There are impressive coin displays, with currency covering a span of 1,700 years. The oldest coin is as far removed from the newest coin as we are. It is remarkable to consider in terms like that.

Here’s a 40-second video dose from inside the facility:

And, finally:


16
May 15

The Abbey Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul

We are in Bath.

This is the Abbey, and on this spot there has been a place of Christian worship, in one form or another, for more than a millennia. Three churches have been there, the first, in 757, an Anglo-Saxon monastery. Norman conquerors destroyed that one and a cathedral was started around 1090, but it was rubble a few hundred years later.

The first King of all England, King Edgar, was crowned here in 973. The monasteries here were closed in 1539, and in 1616 much of the current building was repaired, with new pinnacles and flying buttresses added inside and out in the 19th century. You can see the interior here.

At the top you can just make out the statue of Christ in glory. That one was hard to shoot. But this is the one just above the door, a likeness of King Henry VII. It was placed during a restoration around 1900:

These are the statues installed on either side of the main door. One is Peter and the other is Paul:

And I do enjoy this door:


15
May 15

A little light tourism

Here we are outside of our flat. The blue door is ours.

There’s a light on the timer in the hallway. You have to go to the third floor, and you must do so quickly. The hallway/stairwell light will turn off on you. The room is nice, one we found on Airbnb. We have a living room with a corner kitchen, a bedroom and a bath. Nice little place.

It turns out that a lady lives nearby who is a friend of my mother-in-law. Charming lady. We met here this evening for a walk in Regent’s Park. While we walked and talked I took some pictures.

And I came away with a mystery. What do you call an island that is inside an island?