In Berlin, Pollak ran the electrical equipment factory "G. Wehr Telegraphen-Bau-Anstalt". Later he returned to Britain to commercialize his patents, which were released under the anglicised version of his name, "Charles Pollak". In 1886, he became the director of a Paris company of electric tramways of his design. In the meantime he worked on the design of the electrochemical cell. He was very successful in this and became well-known for it. Later he founded battery factories in Frankfurt, (Germany) and Liesing, Austria. Many battery manufacturers have licensed his designs.
In 1899 he founded his own laboratory and proceeded with further research. He obtained 98 patents on his inventions.
In 1922 he returned to Poland, where a year later he founded a factory in Biała, which exists to the present day.[1] The company started under the name of Polskie Towarzystwo Akumulatorowe and was co-founded by professor and the president of Poland, Ignacy Mościcki. However, Pollak was the first president of this company.