Terra Exports makes Inc. 5000 list three times

Terra Exports, Las Vegas, made Inc. magazine’s Inc. 5000 list for the third time.

878C03E1-AC32-4D11-A9838B981882412D.png
878C03E1-AC32-4D11-A9838B981882412D.png
(Courtesy Inc.)

Terra Exports, Las Vegas, made Inc. magazine’s Inc. 5000 list for the third time.

The company is no 1,899 on the list, which ranks the fastest-growing U.S. private companies, according to a news release. The company has had a four-year sales growth rate of 222%. Terra Exports was No. 1,587 in 2019 and No. 923 in 2017.

“We have an amazing team that has found new and innovative ways to not only keep sales up for the short term, but also help us grow in the future,” Laura Patersnostro, chief financial officer, said in the release. “We will continue to build on these strategies that changed the way we think as we continue to navigate through uncertain times and look towards the future.”

According to Terra Exports, only 1 in 8 Inc. 5000 companies have made the list three times.

Tasteful Selections, Arvin, Calif., a bite-size potato products company that’s celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, was listed at No. 3,941.

Fresh Concepts, Temecula, Calif., which offers a managed produce program that brings together growers, shippers and distributors, was NO. 4,890 on the list.

Related stories:

Laura Paternostro joins Terra Exports as chief financial officer

Terra Exports makes Inc. Magazine list for second year

Produce company doesn’t mind Bitcoin one bit

The Packer logo (567x120)
Related Stories
Hair will support national accounts to help drive continued growth for the brand and its expanding portfolio of guacamole, salsa, queso, bean dips and other refrigerated dip solutions.
The company says the promotion of Lawrence Mallia to vice president of AI strategy and product solutions and addition of Manjusha Sunkavalli as a data scientist comes as its moves its AI-driven solutions from vision to measurable results.
By shifting from late-day, expiration-driven discounts to proactive, morning markdowns fueled by real-time sell-through data, U.S. grocery retailers can transform avoidable produce shrink into a powerful lever for both financial discipline and environmental sustainability.
Read Next
The Canadian province looks to a massive acreage expansion to serve as an export-quality powerhouse while driving domestic sales at home.
Get Daily News
GET MARKET ALERTS
Get News & Markets App