Barbara Spector Yeninas of Holmdel died May 31, 2024, at the age of 84. She was the founder of the premier marketing communications agency BSY Associates, which specialized in maritime, supply chain and logistics and celebrated 50 years of business this year. She will long be remembered as a trailblazer who paved the way for women in the male-dominated maritime industry.
Barbara was born March 21, 1940, in the Bronx, New York, to parents Rose Olenberg Spector and Robert Spector. She moved with her family to Lakewood, where, as a gifted student, she skipped two grades and graduated high school at the age of 16. She discovered her love of journalism while attending New York University – her college editorial column “Barb Wire” was known around campus for its sharp wit and peek into local life. Her first professional position was with the Asbury Park Press, but she very quickly – and very famously – moved over to its competitor, the Newark Evening News, as a general assignment reporter.
While covering the port-driven city, Barbara became immersed in the maritime sector at a time when maritime reporting was almost nonexistent. She immediately recognized the magnitude of containerization and a new transportation concept called “globalization” and was encouraged by her colleagues to develop a maritime beat for the paper. She became the Newark News’ first maritime editor, a move that launched her career, pushed the Port of Newark into the global spotlight, and ignited her lifetime love affair with the industry.
It was also at the Newark News where she would meet her future husband, Joseph Yeninas, an editorial cartoonist and art director at the paper. The two met as co-captains on the picket line during a newspaper strike shortly before the paper folded. They fell in love, and were married in December 1971.
In 1974, Barbara created Barbara Spector Yeninas Associates (BSY) as the premiere voice in maritime and transportation public relations and marketing. Barbara’s integrity, tenacity and drive were the keys to her success at a moment when women were rarely seen on the docks. It wasn’t long before she established an illustrious, international list of clients, which included Pacific Australia Container Express Line (PACE), Taiwan-based Evergreen Marine Corp., Port of Hamburg, Horizon Lines, Global Terminals, INTTRA and Maher Terminals.
Over the course of her career, she became an industry figurehead and loved bringing people from all corners of the transportation industry together. She served as executive director for the Containerization & Intermodal Institute for 35 years and as executive director of NY/NJ Foreign Freight Forwarders and Brokers Association for 18 years. For almost five decades, she produced the United Seamen Service’s Admiral of the Ocean Sea Awards, an annual black-tie gala that celebrated the leaders of maritime.
But even as her business was advancing, Barbara made time for her personal passions. She traveled all over the world (from Panama to Prague, Hawaii to Hong Kong and beyond), loved to cook for her family and friends, and was an avid collector of antique posters and art.
Over the course of her lifetime, Barbara and her company won many creative advertising and marketing communications awards. In 2000, the Girl Scouts of America named her New Jersey Businesswoman of the Year, and in 2007, NJ Biz Magazine honored her as one of the Top 50 Businesswomen in New Jersey. Then, in December 2008, the Containerization & Intermodal Institute awarded her its Lifetime Achievement Award for her many years of work in the industry.
But Barbara will be remembered most of all for her deep commitment to helping, caring for, and lifting those around her. She was always thinking of others, and as good friend and colleague Joe Bonney said, “She just made everyone better.”
She was preceded in death by her husband Joseph and her siblings, Stanley and Cheryl Spector. She was a proud mother of daughters Joanna Saltz of Bernardsville and Laura Newby of Granite Bay, California, and a loving mother-in-law to Scott Saltz and Andy Newby. But her greatest joy was being a doting grandmother to her seven grandchildren, Spencer, Teddy and Everett Saltz, and Zadie, Jones, Isabel and Sam Newby. She is also survived by her siblings, Martin Spector, Alan Spector and his wife Sarah, and Susie Hauptman and her husband Cliff.
Services will be held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 9 at Holmdel Funeral Home, 26 South Holmdel Road, Holmdel, with eulogies at noon.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in her name to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (in honor of her sister Cheryl) or to a charity of your choice.
The article originally appeared in the June 6 – 12, 2024 print edition of The Two River Times.













