Robert W. Lederhilger III, commonly known as Rob Lederhilger, has spent more than two decades working where technology, operations, business, and systems meet. His current work includes the technology company SOLUENCY, the publication Systems & Soil, speaking and mentoring, faith-based business communities, and the developing vision for Restore Creation.
Those projects cover different ground, but they are connected by a practical interest in how things are built and what makes them hold together. Sometimes that means Linux servers, web applications, automation, and operational process. Sometimes it means relationships, responsibility, community, soil, or the slow work of rebuilding. Rob’s public work increasingly centers on both sides of that equation: building systems that function and developing the character, stewardship, and accountability required to use them well.
A technology career built from infrastructure outward
Rob’s professional path into technology began during the commercial growth of the internet, when he helped build an ecommerce business and learned to keep its web systems online. That hands-on necessity became the foundation for a career in web hosting, Linux systems administration, infrastructure operations, application support, and technical leadership.
Over the years, Robert Lederhilger worked in environments ranging from small entrepreneurial ventures to large, business-critical web platforms. His background includes server administration, managed hosting, web operations, deployment, troubleshooting, monitoring, application infrastructure, vendor coordination, team leadership, and the translation of technical issues into business decisions. He has worked directly with the details of systems while also managing the people, process, priorities, and risk around them.
That experience shaped a systems-oriented way of thinking. Reliable technology is rarely the result of a single tool or heroic intervention. It comes from architecture, documentation, monitoring, maintenance, clear ownership, escalation paths, and habits repeated when nobody is watching. The same lesson appears outside technology: healthy organizations and communities depend on the systems they reward and the responsibilities people are willing to carry.
The formal professional resume and career history (opens in a new tab) provides the detailed chronology, roles, technical skills, and leadership experience. This page focuses instead on the broader connections among Rob’s current work.
Current technology work through SOLUENCY
Rob founded SOLUENCY in 2021 as a separate commercial technology company. Its work has developed around practical infrastructure and automation needs for businesses and agencies. Current areas include managed web infrastructure and hosting, custom web and mobile application development, DevOps-oriented support, AI automation and voice-agent implementation, and NFC-enabled digital business-card technology.
Lederhilger.org does not provide or sell those services. Commercial inquiries, current service descriptions, product details, and support belong on SOLUENCY’s official website (opens in a new tab). The Technology & SOLUENCY page here offers career and project context without turning this personal hub into a service provider.
Rob’s approach to current technology work is grounded in lessons earned over many years: automation needs ownership, delegation needs oversight, growth needs controls, and a system is only useful when it serves the people who depend on it. He is particularly interested in using AI where it can make a business more responsive or consistent while keeping promises, limitations, escalation, and human judgment clear.
Rob’s current AI customer-engagement product is presented on the official SOLUENCY VITAL brand site (opens in a new tab), which maintains the current product description and test-drive information.
Writing at Systems & Soil
Systems & Soil is the home for Rob’s long-form writing on technology, land, justice, responsibility, faith, and rebuilding. The title reflects two kinds of work. “Systems” points to infrastructure, process, incentives, automation, and the technical world in which he has spent much of his career. “Soil” points to land, patience, stewardship, cultivation, and the recognition that lasting growth cannot be forced by software or speed.
The publication is intentionally broader than a business blog. Some pieces explain a practical website-building or networking process. Others examine the early preparation for Restore Creation, the relationship between systems and responsibility, or the experience of rebuilding in public. The common thread is a willingness to look beneath surface outcomes and ask what structure, decision, habit, or belief produced them.
Readers can begin with the Systems & Soil project profile or go directly to writing on systems, restoration, and rebuilding (opens in a new tab).
Speaking and mentoring
Rob also speaks and mentors around technology, entrepreneurship, systems thinking, responsible leadership, faith, and the realities of building again after failure or disruption. He does not present a flawless founder story. The value of these conversations comes from technical experience combined with hard-earned perspective about oversight, accountability, risk, relationships, and the difference between an efficient system and a healthy one.
RobLederhilger.com is the dedicated speaking and mentoring site (opens in a new tab). It contains the appropriate context, topics, and contact path, while this biography remains a fuller identity and project page rather than duplicating sales copy.
Faith, business, and community
Christian faith has become a central part of Rob’s life, family, and understanding of stewardship. He helps lead Bayside Business Builders, a Bayside Community Church activity group for business owners and professionals. The group gathers around prayer, introductions, discussion, practical support, prayer requests, and the belief that business can be practiced with integrity and used to bless others.
Bayside Business Builders is a local church-based community. It is separate from Kingdom Business Builders, a distinct faith-based nonprofit/community initiative concerned with ethical business, fellowship, entrepreneurship, and support for people rebuilding after justice involvement. Neither initiative is a division of Lederhilger.org, and one does not own or operate the other.
For Rob, community is more than networking. It creates places where people can learn from one another, receive correction and encouragement, pray together, share practical needs, and remember that ambition is not the same as calling. His interest in mentoring and business community is increasingly tied to responsible leadership: doing good work, telling the truth about status and limitations, and measuring success by more than scale.
Family and the work closest to home
Rob is a husband and father of two young daughters. That role is not an ornamental line in a biography; it has changed how he thinks about time, stability, work, faith, and legacy. The routines of family life—being present, sharing the daily load, teaching, reading, attending church, and helping create a secure home—are among the most important forms of stewardship he carries.
Fatherhood also sharpens the multigenerational question behind several projects: what is being built that should outlast the builder, and what kind of example is being handed down with it? That question appears in his writing, faith-based work, and the planned Restore Creation project.
Restore Creation: a future stewardship vision
Restore Creation is a planned faith-based regenerative-farm and land-stewardship project. It is a vision in development, not an operating farm presented as complete. The intended direction includes regenerative agriculture, care for soil and water, integrated animals and perennial food systems, hospitality, agritourism or retreat concepts, and a long-term place where family, faith, work, and creation can be brought into healthier relationship.
The project is being approached through planning, research, financial preparation, design work, and learning before development. Its multigenerational aim matters: the goal is not merely to acquire land, but to establish principles and systems that future stewards can continue responsibly. The Restore Creation profile explains the public vision with the careful future-oriented language appropriate to its current stage.
Building and rebuilding
Across technology, writing, community, and land, Rob Lederhilger’s current direction can be summarized without grand claims: build what is useful, tell the truth about what exists, take responsibility for what is entrusted, restore what can be restored, and prepare carefully for what comes next. That work remains unfinished by definition.
Lederhilger.org serves as the map. The resume records the professional details. SOLUENCY houses commercial technology work. Systems & Soil holds the writing. RobLederhilger.com handles speaking, mentoring, and contact. The project pages provide accurate status and relationship context for the communities and future vision connected to Robert Lederhilger.
