James Staunton – Director
What is your role at bClear?
I develop, define, and deliver communications strategies, encouraging effective engagement with external audiences in an effort to manage organisations’ external reputation. I specialise in generating insight through research, creating compelling content to raise the profile of businesses – voice-of-authority campaigns and thought-leadership PR.
What is your background and experience?
I started in audit with PwC before becoming an analyst at a financial PR agency (Tulchan, now part of Teneo) and went on to join Smithfield Financial (now part of Edelman). I also worked at ReputationInc, for Nigel “the Shadow” Whittaker and Jeremy Browne – who’d been the director of press and broadcasting under Paddy Ashdown and Charles Kennedy – doing reputation management for clients like the Ministry of Sound. I volunteered for a think tank, too, the Bow Group – working alongside Chris Philp, now the Shadow Home Secretary; Sam Gyimah, who went on to be David Cameron’s Parliamentary Private Secretary; and Kwasi Kwarteng, who became Chancellor of the Exchequer. I joined Wriglesworth, a Top 100 B2B PR agency specialising in personal finance and mortgage PR, in 2006. By the time Wriglesworth was sold in 2015, I was one of three owners. As such, I became an equity partner at acquirer Instinctif. My second exit came in 2019, following Instinctif’s sale to LDC, the private equity arm of Lloyds Banking Group.
What inspires you?
What do you enjoy most about your role?
What do you like to do when you’re not at bClear?
I go walking; I’ve crossed Ben Nevis, Scafell Pike and Snowdon off the list. I also like reading history and watching F1 (#hammertime). In March 2023, I was selected as a candidate to run in the local government elections in Surrey and won my seat on the local council in May — bucking the national trend on a day the Conservatives lost 1,100 seats. But in December 2024, it was announced that smaller councils in Surrey were to be replaced with fewer local authorities under plans for a major redesign of local government. That spelt the beginning of the end for the borough.

