New York, August 17, 2016– Liquid Technology is pleased to announce that the Brooklyn-based company has made the prestigious Inc. 5,000 list for the eighth time in the past nine years. Liquid Technology is ranked at 4,843 on the 2016 Inc. 5,000 list.
“We are honored to be included, on the 2016 Inc. 5,000 list; I am proud to say this is our eighth time being recognized in the past nine years,” said Richard Greene, Liquid Technology’s Managing Partner.
“Due to our best-in-class services, Liquid Technology remains an industry leader. We continue to grow because we provide safe, secure, and compliant services on a global scale,” explained Greene.
Liquid Technology was founded in 2000 by IT professionals, and since 2012, Inc.’s statistics show that the company has had a 3-year growth rate of 46% with a 2015 revenue of $14.1 million. The IT asset management firm has satellite offices across the United States and provides equitable solutions to domestic and global companies in need of managed asset-disposition and strategic advice.
Liquid Technology’s three primary services include computer liquidation, IT asset management services, and DOD-compliant data destruction. The company also provides environmentally-responsible e-waste recycling services, and in 2010 introduced one of the country’s first mobile hard drive shredding services. Clients of Liquid Technology come from a broad spectrum of industries, most of whom are in various transitional situations from moving to merging, downsizing, or simply updating their current IT infrastructure.
Liquid Technology provides fair asset evaluations and impartial solutions to companies in need of managed IT asset-disposition. An acute understanding of current market conditions enables Liquid Technology to integrate specialized knowledge and technological expertise in the proposal and execution of deliberate business strategies and plans of action for asset disposal and recovery.
The Inc. 5,000 list compiles and ranks the fastest growing private companies in America. Many of today’s most profitable public businesses were on the list before they became public.