What contracts has e3tek and az-tek had?
Executive summary
Available reporting shows clear evidence that firms using “Aztec/Aztec Software/AZTEC” branding hold multiple government cooperative contracts — for example, Aztec Software lists a Career and Technical Education contract with El Paso ISD and about 17 other cooperative awards, and AZTEC Engineering Group, Inc. is listed with an “ENVIRONMENTAL DOCUMENTATION” cooperative contract from the Southern California Procurement Alliance plus roughly 37 other cooperative contracts [1] [2]. In contrast, filings and promotional material for companies using the E3TEK/E3tek name emphasize services offered (EMP mitigation, assessments, emergency continuity) but do not enumerate specific government contracts in the provided sources [3] [4] [5] [6].
1. Aztec-branded entities: multiple cooperative contracts on record
Commercial contract-aggregation listings show that Aztec Software is presented with government cooperative contracts including a Career and Technical Education (CTE) materials/services award from El Paso Independent School District and a catalogue of about 17 additional contracts captured by that source [1]. A separate Pavilion listing for “AZTEC ENGINEERING GROUP INC” shows an “ENVIRONMENTAL DOCUMENTATION” cooperative contract from the Southern California Procurement Alliance and a portfolio described as approximately 37 other contracts, indicating that engineering/environmental subsidiaries using the AZTEC name have a sizable cooperative-contract footprint [2]. Vendor support pages for an Aztec office print/service business also point customers to a government contracts portal and mention special contract pricing for municipalities, educational institutions, and government agencies, which is consistent with public-sector resale and service agreements [7].
2. E3TEK/E3tek: capability claims, limited contract detail in sources
Company websites and commercial profiles describe E3TEK Group as providing EMP mitigation products, all-hazard mitigation and strategic national risk assessments, logistics, AI, drone and cybersecurity solutions, and thousands of assessments across dozens of countries, but the sources do not list named government contracts, prime contract numbers, or specific contracting agencies in the material provided [3] [4] [5] [6]. A ZoomInfo profile attributes experience conducting “over 8,000 assessments in 32 countries” and positions E3TEK as assisting states, cities, and communities with emergency continuity planning, which supports the company’s claim of public-sector work without enumerating discrete contract awards in the cited reporting [3].
3. How to read the difference: cooperative listings vs. vendor marketing
The Aztec entries cited come from cooperative-contract aggregator pages that list named cooperative awards and contracting partners [1] [2], which is a different evidentiary category than manufacturer or marketing statements about capabilities and past projects like those used by E3TEK on company sites and business directories [3] [4] [5] [6]. Aggregators such as Pavilion curate cooperative purchasing awards and often capture public cooperative orders, while vendor websites commonly describe services and experience without providing contract numbers or procurement records; the sources here reflect that split [1] [2] [3].
4. What’s missing and how to verify further
The reporting provided does not include contract award documents, federal or state procurement records, contract numbers, dollar amounts, or timelines for either Aztec-branded contracts or any E3TEK contracts, so verification requires consulting procurement portals (e.g., SAM.gov, state/municipal procurement sites) or the issuing cooperative’s contract database to obtain award documents and scopes (no single source in the package supplies those details) [1] [2] [7]. Alternative viewpoints exist: vendor marketing and cooperative listings both serve legitimate roles in public procurement transparency but can obscure scope and scale without primary award records, and some corporate profiles may overstate scale in promotional language [3] [6].