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ICLEANSE ANNOUNCES UV-C PRODUCT LICENSING & DISTRIBUTION PARTNERSHIP WITH CHARGETECH

  ChargeTech, a leader in device management solutions, to combat the spread of COVID-19, expanding iCleanse’s UV-C disinfection product market reach across the Americas, Europe, and the Middle East. ChargeTech will license iCleanse patents for ChargeTech’s existing suite of high capacity, UV-C Clean-Charge-Store Cabinets and Carts. This alliance allows iCleanse and ChargeTech to better serve the marketplace by offering the  most comprehensive suite of patented  chemical-free UV-C disinfection devices to combat  99.99% of pathogens, such as COVID-19. iCleanse is the leader in chemical-free UV-C disinfection for mobile devices and the only patented solution. iCleanse’s partnership with ChargeTech will expand its reach into new markets beyond iCleanse’s industry-leading hospital network. ChargeTech’s connections with businesses across the country, in Europe, and the Middle East will help bring awareness to the power of UV-C and the importance of 

Avon-based iCleanse expands into U K market

Avon-based iCleanse ‒ which makes a non-chemical cleaning product for electronics ‒ announced a major expansion into the United Kingdom market. The company is owned by Chris Allen, who founded and sold for more than $100 million Avon smart home technology company iDevices. ICleanse’s expansion into the U.K. market includes the addition of a four-member sales team working out of England, Wales and Scotland.

Tech The entrepreneur s latest venture is seeing surging demand amid a pandemic

Now Allen says he can grow his newest business, the Avon-based iCleanse, to $ 100 million in just a few years. In July, Allen took ReadyDock Inc. about, a small company in West Hartford that makes docking stations that – using UVA radiation – charge and disinfect electronics such as phones and tablets. He said he saw a lot of potential in the four-person company, but felt it needed a more experienced management team to grow. In April 2020, Hartford Business Journal reported that COVID-19 was creating high demand for ReadyDoc’s product, particularly among hospitals that were short of N95 masks and other medical equipment, but the company did not have enough capital to finance the scale up production. own.

Tech entrepreneur s latest venture sees surging demand amid pandemic

    HARTFORD, Connecticut (Hartford Business Journal) About eight years after Chris Allen founded smart home technology company iDevices, the Avon-based business was generating about $100 million in annual revenue. He eventually sold iDevices which develops and sells smart switches, plugs, sockets, outlets, thermostats and other devices in 2017 to Shelton-based Hubbell Inc. for an undisclosed sum. Now, Allen says he can grow his latest company, Avon-based iCleanse, to the $100-million mark in just a few years. In July Allen acquired ReadyDock Inc., a small West Hartford company that makes docking stations that charge and disinfect using UVA rays electronics like phones and tablets. He said he saw a lot of potential in the four-person company, but thought it needed a more experienced management team to grow.

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