[2] He served as the spokesperson for the PBS documentary Woodstock: Three Days That Defined a Generation released at the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts[3] Steve Alexander was also the Vice President of Public Affairs at Stoorza, Ziegaus and Metzger from 1994 to October 1997.
He was one of the five boxing commissioners that voted to deny a new license for Antonio Margarito after he was caught with plaster inserts in his gloves.
[14] Alexander is the founder and president of The Steve Alexander Group, a public affairs and facilitation firm which focuses on strategic communications, media and crisis communications and training, facilitation, coaching, team-building and training for a variety of large government agencies, non-profit organizations and businesses including the city of San Diego, The Nature Conservancy, QUALCOMM and Callaway Golf.
[15] Alexander's work with The Naturelands Project and National Automated Highway System Consortium earned “Pollie” awards from the American Association of Political Consultants in 1998.
As a public speaker, Steve Alexander was hosted in Chile to facilitate a communication workshop to improve the country's natural resource planning in 2003.