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Contents
Features
Making It in Alaska
Edible, adoptable, or just plain useful products
Top of Page, Top of Mind
The artificially induced death and certain revival of SEO
Emergency Planning
Are you flying by the seat of your pants?
The Military Boost
Armed forces benefit Alaska’s economy in more ways than one
A Niche Touch
Local marketing firms find success Outside by narrowing their focus
Making It in Alaska
Edible, adoptable, or just plain useful products
Top of Page, Top of Mind
The artificially induced death and certain revival of SEO
Emergency Planning
Are you flying by the seat of your pants?
The Military Boost
Armed forces benefit Alaska’s economy in more ways than one
A Niche Touch
Local marketing firms find success Outside by narrowing their focus
Quick Reads
About The Cover
The cover strives to elevate this magazine’s usual design by using the latest tools. Processed by a machine, the graphic was refined by a human. But don’t get used to it; Sterchi-Lowman only considered the approach because of this month’s theme of “elevation.” Additional typography refinements can be found throughout this month’s special section.
Volume 40, #10
Billie Martin
press@akbizmag.com
Postmaster:
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From the Editor
hortly after stepping into the role of managing editor, I was struggling with what to write in a “Letter from the Editor,” and I was playing around with something football related. My immediate family members are not football people, but my husband is, and I had just been informed that I’m a Seahawks fan. I was trying (unsuccessfully, as it turns out) to use the experience as a metaphor; not football itself, but the idea of stepping into an unfamiliar culture and how opening myself to that experience was—in the end—rewarding and delightful.
As others on the Alaska Business team reviewed the letter, they kept getting caught up thinking that the game itself should be the metaphor, which didn’t gel with me. Others, who are far better versed in the sport than I, have written whole books on how football is a metaphor for life, business, marriage, dog grooming (probably), and a slew of other things. My voice would not be a valuable contribution to that space, so I scrapped it and moved on.
he expense of sourcing raw materials into Alaska and then distributing finished products out has baffled and thwarted manufacturing ventures, big and small. Yet many Alaskans have succeeded well enough to thrive in the widget-making sector.
Local material sourcing (and sometimes a side hustle or two) helps support the entrepreneur as well as their surrounding community, which benefits from a lively local economy.
The State of Alaska has the Made in Alaska program to promote products made, manufactured, or handcrafted in the state. Products that meet the program’s “51 percent or more” criteria of being produced in Alaska are allowed to display the polar bear sticker logo, signifying the item’s authenticity as Made in Alaska.
hink back to the last time you went looking for some answers.
Maybe you needed a dog-friendly restaurant for your company party. Maybe you couldn’t quite remember how many teaspoons were in a tablespoon (it’s still three).
Whatever the question, one thing is clear: Google has the answer.
And for most queries submitted to the search engine, it has many. The page that appears after clicking return is what search engine optimization professionals refer to as the SERP, or search engine results page. How, where, and when your business shows up on the SERP can have a major impact on its ability to drive website traffic, gain new customers, and increase revenue.
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wo years ago, I emailed my best friend a satire that I wrote. I didn’t plan to publish the essay, but I thought it pertinent to our circumstances and wanted to share a laugh. I texted him to check his inbox.
Seconds later, our thread had an emoji representing laughter.
“You read it already?” I replied. “You thought it was funny?”
He liked my message.
“I know you’re a fast reader, but I didn’t think you were *that* fast,” I wrote. It had about 1,500 words.
“It was one word.” Ellipses blinked, followed by a screenshot of a white page with four letters in parentheses centered across the top: (null).
o thrive in today’s market, companies must understand and respond to trends that can make commercial insurance more difficult and expensive to obtain—especially in Alaska.
Take property insurance, for example. For the past five years, commercial insurance buyers have generally seen significant premium increases in the property market, driven by natural catastrophes, social inflation, economic inflation, increased reinsurance costs, and higher costs of claims, according to Anna Kohler, an Anchorage-based account executive with Parker, Smith & Feek, one of the fifty largest insurance brokerage firms in the United States.
laska is truly a special place, and amongst the environs that intertwine to form the fabric of this great state, perhaps none are more special than the isolated encampments that comprise the fly-out fishing lodges of Katmai and Bristol Bay. As a teen in the early ‘80s—and later as a young adult—I was extremely fortunate to work for several seasons in Katmai, first as a lodgekeeper at Brooks Camp and ultimately as a fly-fishing guide at Kulik Lodge. Those were some of the most meaningful and memorable summers I could ever hope to experience, and the lessons learned working there have carried me quite well throughout my professional life.
Fondly recalling my guiding days, I keenly remember the sense of immediacy, focus, and ultimate responsibility I felt towards any client I accompanied on the region’s rivers and streams. However, if I were to be totally honest, I’d have to admit I was likely a little cocky (or at least overconfident) in my ability to handle any situation that might have arisen. Moreover, my recollections are firmly rooted within my own first-person perspective, with little recall or awareness as to how the owners and management staff of the lodges were prepared to deal with the rapid evolution of any emergency.
Spotting trends and navigating turbulent waters can’t happen from behind a desk. The insights come when we put on our hard hats and meet our clients where they are.
Spotting trends and navigating turbulent waters can’t happen from behind a desk. The insights come when we put on our hard hats and meet our clients where they are.
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s the saying goes, every team is the sum of its parts. Different challenges and tasks require specific abilities. Some team members excel in conflict resolution, others in maintaining focus, and some thrive building and retaining relationships. The key lies in identifying and harnessing each team member’s unique talents, which is what we call embracing strengths-based development.
At PeopleAK, we work hard to always keep our own strengths and each other’s top of mind. To cultivate strengths-based development in any organization, we have found it is important to have easy access to your Team’s Strengths Grid. In our office, we have ours as the wallpaper on our conference room TV, which allows us to easily reference it as we strategize and collaborate as a team. We also all have our top 5 Strengths listed in our signature lines for a reminder when emailing internally with each other.
prah Winfrey’s ability to influence consumer purchasing choices, particularly since she launched a book club segment on her TV talk show in 1996, has been dubbed “the Oprah Effect.” A benediction from the media mogul can boost a previously little-known entity to new heights of popularity.
To bring the same Midas touch to the field of hotels and wellness resorts, her Oprah Daily magazine inaugurated the O-wards earlier this year. Honorees demonstrate the ability to transform, teach, and serve as catalysts for becoming what Winfrey calls “the person you were always meant to be.” According to the magazine, these properties touch on every aspect of self-care and range from accommodations that unite generations to treat-yourself spa weekends with girlfriends and spaces that welcome solo hikers.
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together
Events | Concerts | Conferences | Conventions | Banquets | Meetings | Trade Shows | Weddings | In-house Catering | Equipment Technology
The Meeting:
May 10-14, 2026
400 Delegates
Estimated Economic Impact: $848,542
Meeting Champion
The National Association of Environmental Professionals (NAEP), an organization committed to promoting best practices, ethical standards, and professional development within the environmental industry, will hold their annual conference in Anchorage for the first time in May 2026, showcasing the Alaska Chapter and area projects. The environmental sector is vital in Alaska due to its diverse land and resource development needs. Anna Kohl’s passion for this field began with site assessments – evaluations that identify potential environmental impacts of proposed developments – and led her to join NAEP. Thanks to her efforts, Anchorage was selected for its central location, providing attendees easy access to both the conference and Alaska’s stunning natural beauty.
The Meeting:
May 10-14, 2026
400 Delegates
Estimated Economic Impact: $848,542
The National Association of Environmental Professionals (NAEP), an organization committed to promoting best practices, ethical standards, and professional development within the environmental industry, will hold their annual conference in Anchorage for the first time in May 2026, showcasing the Alaska Chapter and area projects. The environmental sector is vital in Alaska due to its diverse land and resource development needs. Anna Kohl’s passion for this field began with site assessments – evaluations that identify potential environmental impacts of proposed developments – and led her to join NAEP. Thanks to her efforts, Anchorage was selected for its central location, providing attendees easy access to both the conference and Alaska’s stunning natural beauty.
Are you a member of an association?
Contact Visit Anchorage to bring your group to town:
meetings@anchorage.net | 907.276.4118
ongratulations to this year’s Top 49ers! Earning a spot in this prestigious group has never been easy, and the threshold for making the list year is higher than ever, with Everts Air Cargo | Everts Air Alaska reporting $74.9 million in gross revenue to close the ranks. At the top of the ranks, Arctic Slope Regional Corporation also set a new record, reporting $5.5 billion in gross revenue.
Overall the 2024 Top 49ers reported nearly $27 billion in gross revenue for 2023, a more than 12 percent increase over the year previous. Total employment for the group worldwide has climbed to 94,278 (an almost 5,000 increase) and, of those, 24,954 are Alaskans (about 2,400 more than last year).
Why is this significant? That answer lies in who the Top 49ers are. They are companies that were initially launched in Alaska; they maintain headquarters within the state; and they have not been acquired by an Outside company. This means that the revenue these companies generate benefits Alaska through property ownership or leasing, employment, use of local vendors and subcontractors, local partnerships and ties, an avid interest in local policy and politics, and a sense of obligation and responsibility for local communities. Note the emphasis on “local.”
From Adak in the Aleutians to Juneau in the Southeast, to Elliott Highway in the Interior and in our hometown of Utqiaġvik, UIC is rising above to meet diverse business needs across Alaska.
And that’s just a tip of the iceberg.
ualifying for the Top 49ers list has rarely been harder than this year. Not because Alaska-owned companies are struggling—far from it. Companies are surging, especially in the construction sector, and that raises the bar to achieve this elite status. The minimum gross revenue from 2023 reported this year is nearly $75 million, greater than four of last year’s Top 49ers.
This year the Top 49ers also report the highest aggregate revenue, with the forty-nine companies’ revenue adding up to nearly $27 billion.
Two companies new to the Top 49ers list contributed to that record, and one came close. They’ve earned some extra attention.
he Top 49ers include top performing companies with a diverse range of services and products. Even though approximately half the 2024 Top 49ers are Alaska Native corporations, this, too, only speaks to the diversity of ventures that can build a successful company, as they have subsidiaries and partners in every major Alaska industry. Success is not limited to any single industry; it’s about elevating services, perfecting products, and refining collaboration and communication.
This year, we asked the Top 49ers: What project have you completed, or what service do you provide, that exemplifies your expertise—and how have you refined that expertise over the years?
Here are their responses, in no particular order, edited for length and house style.
nterior businesses featured on the 2024 Top 49ers list are a cross-section of sectors vital to the thriving economy of the Fairbanks area. Everts Air Cargo | Everts Air Alaska, Great Northwest, Inc., and Doyon, Limited have all contributed to increased growth in their respective industries, a testament to their business savvy, quality services, and growing impact in the Interior.
nterior businesses featured on the 2024 Top 49ers list are a cross-section of sectors vital to the thriving economy of the Fairbanks area. Everts Air Cargo | Everts Air Alaska, Great Northwest, Inc., and Doyon, Limited have all contributed to increased growth in their respective industries, a testament to their business savvy, quality services, and growing impact in the Interior.
Under the umbrella corporation Tatonduk Outfitters Limited, Everts Air Cargo offers scheduled and charter air freight services within Alaska, as well as on-demand charter services throughout North, Central, and South America, including the Caribbean. Everts Air Alaska provides passenger, freight, and charter services utilizing smaller aircraft—Pilatus PC-12s, Cessna 208 Grand Caravans, and Cessna 408 SkyCouriers—based in Fairbanks. With a diverse fleet, both carriers can transport a variety of cargo, including small packages, hazardous materials, oversized items, and precious cargo such as live animals.
Machuca is a former head of the Alaska Small Business Development Center (SBDC) Anchorage office and the current director of its new AI Resource Center. He says, “Valuation can be a great tool when a startup young entrepreneur is planning a long-term exit strategy, and he/she wants to maximize their business development efforts in what brings the most value to the structure of their business.”
The most common reasons for business valuations are selling or acquiring a business; pursuing strategic capital or a business loan; resolving tax or legal issues; determining assets in the case of death, disability, disaster, or divorce; and gifting or donating company stock.
Machuca is a former head of the Alaska Small Business Development Center (SBDC) Anchorage office and the current director of its new AI Resource Center. He says, “Valuation can be a great tool when a startup young entrepreneur is planning a long-term exit strategy, and he/she wants to maximize their business development efforts in what brings the most value to the structure of their business.”
The most common reasons for business valuations are selling or acquiring a business; pursuing strategic capital or a business loan; resolving tax or legal issues; determining assets in the case of death, disability, disaster, or divorce; and gifting or donating company stock.
FL coach Vince Lombardi is famous for saying, “Leaders aren’t born, they are made. And they are made just like anything else, through hard work.” While some may be born with innate leadership skills, those who plan to lead must intentionally work to hone a specific set of skills that are necessary for effective, quality leadership.
Work, though, might look like play. One way of developing leadership skills is through outdoor and adventure activities. According to a 2012 psychology study from the University of Kansas, Lawrence, spending time outdoors can help improve creative reasoning as well as other skills. Engaging in adventurous activities cultivates decision-making, problem-solving, resilience, and more.
he rhythmic lap of sea-green waves against weathered harbor pilings sets the backdrop for a quintessential Homer scene. A boat full of adventurous Alaskans, their XtraTufs glistening with spray, heads out to time-honored fishing grounds. The air is rich with the mingled scents of salt and fresh catch, punctuated by cheers when another halibut tugs at a line from the depths of Kachemak Bay. Homer, while proudly bearing the crown of “Halibut Fishing Capital of the World,” offers so much more than bountiful waters. It’s a nexus of natural beauty, productive ecosystems, recreation, adventure, subsistence, and commerce, all connected and accessible through the City of Homer Port and Harbor.
For many, though, Homer Harbor is more than a port; it’s the heart of home. The maritime industry pumps life into the regional economy, fueling everything from recreation and leisure to bustling commercial enterprises. This vital hub’s circulatory system extends far beyond the local shores. A vast network of transportation and shipping routes plays a crucial role in nourishing the broader Alaska economy, facilitating the flow of goods, services, and people across the region and state.
“Homer Harbor is woven into the lifestyle of almost every Homer resident,” says Brad Anderson, executive director of the Homer Chamber of Commerce and Visitor Center. “Many young people had their first job with a business connected to the harbor.”
- Oil & Gas
- Government Sector
- Telecommunications
- Healthcare
- Transportation
- Private & Commercial
- Occupant Relocation
owntown Adelaide, Australia was visible in the background of the video message Kevin Gallagher recorded for the August conference of the Alaska Oil and Gas Association (AOGA). “Alaska’s geology is great,” said the managing director and CEO of Australian energy company Santos. “We love your rocks, and as a driller (a retired driller), I love the challenge of producing from them.”
Gallagher started in the oil business on North Sea rigs off the shore of his native Scotland. With his Glaswegian accent, he recounted the challenges receding into the rear-view as Santos progresses toward production from its Pikka project on the North Slope.
For instance, Cruz Construction needed just fifty-seven days to complete piledriving at a horseshoe-shaped barge facility jutting into the Beaufort Sea at Oliktok Point, the northernmost extent of industrial facilities west of Prudhoe Bay. Cruz finished ahead of schedule with a remarkable safety record, earning the Contractor of the Year Award for Safety Performance from AOGA.
Gallagher offered thanks to Cruz and all the partners at Pikka. But he couldn’t do it in person; he recorded the video in lieu of a planned visit to the conference in Anchorage. He said he hopes to return to Alaska in the near future.
ven before Alaska became a state, the military was shaping its economy. World War II led to an expansion of the armed forces and created an economic boom in the state, but the military was building infrastructure that benefitted Alaska’s economy as early as the Gold Rush era. Completed in 1905, the Washington-Alaska Military Cable and Telegraph System was the first major infrastructure improvement the military made in Alaska; owned by the military but used by civilians, WAMCATS (as it was called) would eventually become AT&T Alaska.
Since then, the health of Alaska’s economy has depended upon the activity of the nine military bases across the state. Between spending on new construction, growing the state’s population, and generating jobs, the military lags only the oil industry and federal spending in generating income and jobs for the state.
According to a US Department of Defense (DOD) Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration Program report, Alaska received $4 billion in defense spending in fiscal year 2022. The figure includes payment of personnel salaries, defense contracts, and construction of military facilities. Besides directly funneling money into Alaska’s economy, the military attracts other industries to the state. Meanwhile, the nearly 28,500 military personnel (as of 2022) and their families who make Alaska their home contribute temporarily and long-term to the health of the state’s economy.
Northbound 800.426.0074 | Southbound 800.234.8683
cribbles marred the faces of officials most Alaskans wouldn’t recognize. On flyers that arrived in mailboxes this spring, Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority (AIDEA) board members were shown as a pirate, a clown, a pig, a chicken, and a devil. The only female board member was depicted as a fanged troll while, in a gesture toward gender sensitivity, the guise of a warty witch was applied to her male colleague.
What had they done to deserve such treatment? According to the flyers, the AIDEA board members are “losers” because, under their watch, “Alaska lost out on $10 billion.”
AIDEA has been in the crosshairs before. For decades, its most notorious failed investments have been talking points for small-government conservatives opposed to state intervention in the free market. The flyer, though, is not conservative handiwork; it is sponsored by the 907 Initiative, which spent the last couple of years making sure Anchorage voters were aware of Mayor Dave Bronson’s every shortcoming, until he lost re-election in May.
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n online search for “Alaska marketing agencies” returns descriptions like “grow your local business,” “hundreds of satisfied clients in Alaska,” “the local go-to.” Local agencies tailor their services to the needs of local businesses, promising Alaska solutions for Alaska entrepreneurs.
The approach makes sense, according to the founders of Orange Slice, an Anchorage-based agency that builds marketing strategies for local clients like Mr. Prime Beef and Alaska Chip Company. “Alaska is unlike anywhere else and demands a unique approach to marketing strategies,” asserts the Orange Slice website.
But a handful of local marketing agencies have found success by doing less. While these agencies still offer an array of marketing services, they’ve each narrowed their client base to a single industry—and, by doing so, they have expanded beyond Alaska to find success throughout the Lower 48.
ook closely at a phone bill; there’s a tax added for the Universal Service Fund (USF). The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) manages the USF to bolster projects aimed at expanding and improving broadband and cellular communication. Normally, providers must meet strict standards to receive funds from the USF. But things aren’t that simple in Alaska, which is why the FCC created a special order for Alaska providers, aptly called the Alaska Plan.
“Alaska just does not have the infrastructure that they have in the Lower 48… It’s a balance of how much money you have and how good a service can you provide, and just that mix in Alaska is different,” says Christine O’Connor, executive director of Alaska Telecom Association (ATA). “So they allowed the opportunity to adjust what those obligations are based on the realities on the ground.”
Anchorage, AK 99507
www.materialflow.com
ranted, there is a crushing amount of general information available on how to best execute a B2B marketing strategy. A big caveat: Alaska is its own beast, a mix between ongoing economic opportunities and the logistical challenges that come with 1,000 miles of separation from our closest US neighbor. A B2B plan that works in Seattle, Denver, or Tallahassee doesn’t always resonate with Alaskans.
This is where Alaska Business comes in. We have the tools marketers need to reach the decision-makers who do business in Alaska. As you may be aware, Alaska Business has evolved into much more than a print magazine.We have developed many strategies—print and online—to get your message out.
Jeremy Hansen and Tyler Gress first became entrepreneurs in middle school, providing small-scale IT services to customers in Juneau. In 2005, they joined forces to open Hansen Gress, a managed service provider that provides clients with everything from help desk to back-office infrastructure support and virtual CIO—and their partnership with GCI has lasted almost as long.
“We have worked with GCI since we were 13 and the Internet first came to Juneau,” said Hansen. “I was a beta tester for the first cable system rolled out in the city.”
“It changed our 13-year-old lives,” laughed Gress. “We will forever have a warm spot in our hearts for GCI bringing blazing fast speed to our community.”
ommercial property insurance is vital to the operations of Alaska businesses. Without it, a business would have to pay out of pocket to repair or replace property if it’s damaged. Protecting these critical assets with adequate replacement cost insurance is always the goal.
Replacement cost value is defined as the value of the cost to replace the item with a similar like, kind, and quality. The concept of “insurance to value” is rooted in the principle of indemnity, which aims to restore the insured to the same financial position they were in before a loss occurred. By knowing the accurate estimation of what it would take to fully replace or restore an insured building, owners can realize sufficient protection and avoid penalties when a covered loss occurs.
Fairbanks 907.458.9049 · Anchorage 907.341.2250 · esialaska.com
Gabriel Kompkoff, previously President and CFO, is Kelley’s successor as President and CEO. He spent seven years as president and CEO of Chugach Alaska Corporation before joining Grant Aviation in 2021. Kompkoff earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology from the University of Washington and returned to the school for a master’s degree in urban economics and real estate development.
Doug Deering is promoted to Senior Vice President. Deering has been a cornerstone in Grant’s maintenance department; in his new role, he also oversees station operations.
Cory Clark takes the newly created role of Director of Systems and Process Improvement, responsible for enhancing Grant’s technology systems while streamlining operations and increasing efficiency. Clark was previously director of facilities.
The new Director of Facilities is Kelley Tedd. He comes to Grant with more than twenty years of facilities management experience, mostly for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Most recently, he led a team of thirty-six facilities managers and technicians for a large nonprofit across Alaska, Washington, and British Columbia.
Alaska Trends
ot since Distant Early Warning Line radar stations kept vigil for Soviet incursions has the Arctic attracted as much attention for national security. The US Department of Defense (DOD) published a new Arctic Strategy in July. The first update in five years has to account for new allies across the sea: Finland and Sweden have joined NATO, completing a circle around the Arctic.
DOD spent about $4 billion in Alaska in fiscal year 2022. That’s $5,460 per capita, among the highest share of any state. Still, it’s less than 1 percent of all US defense spending, placing Alaska 30th among states.
As a percentage of the state economy, though, the military’s impact is greater only in Virginia, Hawai’i, and Connecticut (home of the US Coast Guard Academy, the submarine force in Groton, and pharmaceutical company Pfizer, a major defense contractor). And, of course, Washington, DC outranks Alaska, with 6.7 percent of the local economy buoyed by the military.
Golf… I’m lucky if I can play once a week.
What’s the first thing you do when you get home after a long day at work?
Probably veg out on the couch watching TV, I suppose.
What vacation spot is on your bucket list?
I haven’t been to the island of Kaua’i. It’s supposed to be the peaceful one, so that’s where I would go.
What charity or cause are you passionate about?
Big Brothers Big Sisters.
If you could domesticate a wild animal, what animal would it be?
What am I supposed to do with this animal? [he laughs] I’ve never heard of anybody taming a wild loon.
Golf… I’m lucky if I can play once a week.
What’s the first thing you do when you get home after a long day at work?
Probably veg out on the couch watching TV, I suppose.
What vacation spot is on your bucket list?
I haven’t been to the island of Kaua’i. It’s supposed to be the peaceful one, so that’s where I would go.
What charity or cause are you passionate about?
Big Brothers Big Sisters.
If you could domesticate a wild animal, what animal would it be?
What am I supposed to do with this animal? [he laughs] I’ve never heard of anybody taming a wild loon.
Off the Cuff
rowing up around horses near the foot of the Horse Heaven Hills in Washington, Corey Meyers rode down a different trail as soon as he got his driver’s license. Cars became his thing.
Meyers has spent the last thirty-five years at Anchorage Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram, working his way up from salesman to assistant manager. He’s been president and general manager since 2005. His tenure saw sales peak in 2014 (in nominal dollars), with more than $97 million in gross revenue, nearly doubled from a decade earlier.
The dealership also earned praise from the supplier of its Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and Ram nameplates for making Alaska, at times, one of the only markets outselling the dominant Ford F-150 and comparable Chevy and Toyota trucks. Meyers credits the skill of his sales team, aided by the “very stable reputation” of the dealership. Anchoring the gateway to Anchorage on East Fifth Avenue, the company has been under family ownership since 1963.
- 3-Tier Alaska
- 49th State Brewing Company - Northern Hospitality
- Airport Equipment Rentals
- Alasconnect
- Alaska Air Cargo - Alaska Airlines
- Alaska International Business Center
- Alaska Mergers & Acquisitions, LLC
- Alaska Miners Association
- Alaska Pacific University
- Alaska Sausage Company, Inc.
- Alaska School Activities Association
- Alaska Travel Industry Association
- Alyeska Resort
- Alyeska Tire
- Anchorage Chrysler Dodge
- Anchorage Convention Centers
- Arctic Slope Regional Corporation
- ASRC Construction
- ASTAC - Arctic Slope Telephone Assoc
- Avis Rent-A-Car
- Bering Straits Native Corp
- Bristol Bay Native Corporation
- Chugach Alaska Corporation
- CIRI
- City and Borough of Wrangell
- Color Art Printing, Inc.
- Colville, Inc
- ConocoPhillips Alaska
- Conrad-Houston Insurance Agency
- Construction Machinery Industrial
- Cook Inlet Tug & Barge Inc
- Copper River Management Company
- Cornerstone General Contractors
- Craig Taylor Equipment
- Credit Union 1
- Crowley Fuels
- Cruz Companies
- Davis Constructors & Engineers Inc
- Denali Commercial
- Design Alaska
- Dorsey & Whitney LLP
- Equipment Source, Inc
- Fay Ranches
- First National Bank Alaska
- Fountainhead Development
- GCI
- Global Credit Union
- Grant Aviation
- Great Northwest Inc
- Great Originals Inc
- Hotel Captain Cook
- Huna Totem Corporation
- JAG Alaska
- JD Steel Co Inc
- JEFFCO Inc.
- Junior Achievement
- Landye Bennett Blumstein LLP
- Littler
- Lynden
- Manley Brautigam Bankston P.C
- Material Flow & Conveyor Systems, Inc.
- Matson Inc.
- Meridian Management, Inc.
- MICROCOM
- MTA - Matanuska Telecom Association
- Nana Regional Corp
- Nenana Heating Services, Inc
- NIMA Corporation
- Northern Air Cargo
- Northrim Bank
- Outlook Law
- Oxford Assaying & Refining Inc
- Parker, Smith & Feek
- PeopleAK
- Photo Emporium Alaska
- PIP Marketing Signs Print
- PND Engineers Inc.
- Providence Alaska
- Providence Imaging Center
- Resource Development Council
- Roger Hickel Contracting Inc
- SATEC Inc.
- Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C.
- Seatac Marine
- Sheet Metal Inc
- Sourdough Express, Inc.
- Span Alaska Transportation LLC
- Stellar Designs Inc
- Structured Communication Systems
- Subway of Alaska
- T. Rowe Price
- The Kuskokwim Corporation
- TOTE Maritime Alaska LLC
- Udelhoven Oilfield System Services, Inc
- Ukpeagvik Inupiat Corporation
- Umialik Insurance Company
- United Way of Anchorage
- Visit Anchorage
- Vitus Energy
- Watterson Construction
- Westinghouse Electric Company LLC
- Westmark Fairbanks Hotel & Conference Center
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Horsepower: 454 HP @ 1800 RPM
Bucket Capacity: 4 – 6 Cubic Yards
Max Digging Depth: 32 Feet
Lift Capacity: 51,000 Lbs
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