MACOMB, MI, June 08, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ -- Patrick J. Lademan has been included in Marquis Who's Who. As in all Marquis Who's Who biographical volumes, individuals profiled are selected on the basis of current reference value. Factors such as position, noteworthy accomplishments, visibility, and prominence in a field are all taken into account during the selection process.
Mr. Lademan is an identity and access management engineer IV at The Standard, a position he has held since 2023. In this capacity, he applies his expertise in automation, reverse engineering, connecting disparate systems and infrastructure as code skills that have distinguished him as an authority in his field. He developed an automated deployment process before Ping developed the APIs by reverse engineering their UI APIs. His technical acumen is rooted in a lifelong passion for innovation and problem-solving, which began in his youth and has continued to define his professional journey.
From 2013 to 2023, Mr. Lademan was the Java technical lead at Cloudentity, now SecureAuth Corporation, in Seattle. During this decade-long tenure, he developed solutions that supported corporate and customer requirements.
Prior to this, Mr. Lademan worked as a Java developer at Ford Motor Company in Dearborn, Michigan, from 2012 to 2013. There, he solved a complex SQL query of 12 million rows with the closest matching 1024 option outer join sorted by earliest delivery thought to be impossible in a SQL database. He used his boolean logic experience to compress the join into a single string of binary flags. The performance benchmark was 100ms, his solution returned the result in 90ms.
Between 2010 and 2012, he served as a senior Java developer at eProcurement Services in Auburn Hills, Michigan. He played a pivotal role in designing and implementing catalog solutions that streamlined clients' business processes. This company was a restart of the Osiris Innovations.
From 2008 to 2010, Mr. Lademan was a senior Java developer at Osiris Innovations Group LLC, where he single handedly developed an online catalog web application with configurable pricing per tenant and the tenant's customers.
He also worked as a Java architect at Chrysler between 2000 and 2008 where he developed a component based Java UI that outperformed other frameworks at the time.
Prior to that, while working at Ford Motor Company in Dearborn from 1992 to 1996, he designed an SCP hardware interface card, wrote instrument cluster changes in 8-bit assembler, developed message interfaces in C, reverse engineered SQL databases to provide dynamic forms and reporting with foreign key resolution and column mapping. When he was told by the chief engineer of the VAPS (Vehicle Application Prototyping System) that it could not import TrueType fonts, Mr. Lademan developed a process to convert the fonts from vector to raster source code and import them into the system.
From 1987 to 1989, Mr. Lademan was a software developer for Antares in Madison Heights, MI. While he was there, he developed an electronic spline measurement gauge. He replaced the manual single point calibration method with a fully electronic process using two point linear regression calibrating to high and low spline masters. He wrote 10,000 lines of 8-bit assembler in 6 months which included histogram, X-bar R, X-Bar S and median statistics charts. Not bad for a high school Algebra 2 student. During a demo to the customer, he sprayed freeze spray on the circuit until it was white with frost, the measurement lost 0.0001" and using a heat gun on the circuit, the measurement gained 0.0002". The customer was thrilled because the steel will move more than that.
Prior to that, Mr. Lademan worked for Phototron from 1984 to 1987 where he developed the hardware and software for a 6 axis robotic controller, vehicle rolls tester, GM car diagnostic tool, and a sludge waste management control system. He continued to develop all the hardware and software by himself then he handed off the schematic to the circuit board department to design and etch the circuit board then the assembly department assembled and tested the products. It was his favorite job because customers came in the front door with an idea and walked out the backdoor with a finished product.
In 1982, he graduated from Stevenson High School in Sterling Heights, MI with vocational medals in electronics and small engine repair. In small engine repair, he built an engine from parts he found in the parts room. After graduation, he worked for CompuVox where he developed software for Commodore computers and IBM PCs. It was there that Mr. Lademan developed a voice synthesizer for the mute. He designed all the hardware and wrote the entire operating system independently, a feat typically accomplished by teams of engineers. This accomplishment stands as a testament to his ingenuity and determination in overcoming significant technical challenges. He received a patent for the voice synthesizer. It's a notable accomplishment for a 19-year-old.
Mr. Lademan began his professional career as a software developer at Plumbook Elementary starting from 1980 to 1982 where he used his skills to develop a film library database in BASIC then a RAM disk and split screen tutoring program in 8-bit assembler. In 1981, he bought a Commodore PET 2001 computer which allowed him to develop software outside of work.
His early teenage interest in technology was sparked by hobbies such as model railroading, old radios and TVs. He initially used an old washing machine timer to automate the lights on his train set then eventually spent time developing digital logic to perform the same function. His curiosity led him to learn programming on the TRS-80 computer shortly after its release in 1977. By high school, he was already writing code and was recommended by his teacher for a programming position at a local elementary school.
Perseverance is the throughline of Mr. Lademan's career. He credits goal-setting and steady effort as his core disciplines, while treating discouragement from others as noise to be filtered rather than heeded. That mindset has repeatedly led him to crack problems his peers considered unsolvable, a reputation cemented by thinking outside the box.
Beyond the workplace, Mr. Lademan and his wife are civically engaged as marriage mentors for 2nd marriages, reflecting their commitment to supporting others in his community. Outside his professional pursuits, he enjoys designing and building Asian inspired wood furniture, dancing and teaching Argentine tango, and 1963/1964 Chevy Novas. He and his wife are also building toward a future that blends their shared interests in woodworking, gardening and marriage ministry.
Looking ahead, Mr. Lademan intends to continue pursuing endeavors that align with his passions rather than conforming to external expectations. His enduring commitment to innovation, mentorship and personal fulfillment promises to shape every stage of life yet to come.
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