Infrastructure Leadership
Servers, networking, virtualization, storage, cloud, security, backups, vendor coordination, capacity planning, and hardware lifecycle work.
I'm Trevor Kruse. I build, support, and improve infrastructure across servers, networking, virtualization, hosting, cloud, and customer-facing systems.
I like systems stable, documented, backed up, and slightly less cursed.
Application Notes
A custom page for a custom role
Documented, backed up, and built to keep working when the glamorous stuff is over.
Docker, Nginx, and a simple static build so the hosting story stays boring in the right way.
Serious infrastructure work, with just enough dry humor to prove a human was involved.
Why Corporate Tools
I'm interested in Corporate Tools because the role combines the kind of work I enjoy most: infrastructure leadership, practical problem-solving, data center operations, hosting, open-source technology, and building systems that scale without needing heroics every week.
The role mixes infrastructure, hosting, Linux, data center operations, networking, and systems work instead of just ticket triage in a trench coat.
It rewards people who can plan, communicate, troubleshoot, challenge assumptions, and keep systems moving without turning everything into ceremony.
Serious work, but not sterile. The job posting made it clear Corporate Tools understands infrastructure and the people who keep it alive.
The letter
“This job description sounds like someone took the kind of infrastructure work I enjoy, added better jokes, and put a very aggressive salary range at the top.”
Dear Corporate Tools Team,
I'm applying for the IT Infrastructure Manager position because the job description reads like it was written by someone who actually understands what infrastructure work looks like from the inside - not just as a checklist of buzzwords, but as a real picture of the work.
The mix of data center operations, Linux hosting, open-source technology, networking, infrastructure leadership, and customer-facing systems is the kind of work I enjoy most and have intentionally built my career around. My background includes Windows Server, VMware and VxRail environments, Active Directory, DNS, VPNs, firewalls, RDS/FSLogix, backup systems, networking, hardware lifecycle work, and supporting business-critical infrastructure across multi-site environments. I've handled migrations that take longer than planned, systems that were more haunted than documented, and vendor conversations that somehow require three meetings to answer one question.
In my current role, I work on the State of Minnesota's Windows Server team, supporting enterprise server infrastructure across a large, multi-agency environment. That role has sharpened my appreciation for scale, standards, change control, documentation, and the importance of clear ownership when many teams and systems are involved.
Before that, I supported infrastructure across production and office environments, including servers, networking, wireless, firewalls, backups, security tooling, Office 365, printers, and the occasional mystery device everyone swears has always been there. I also led or helped drive major modernization efforts involving VMware clusters, VxRail, infrastructure upgrades, and projects tied to growth and acquisitions.
Outside of my day job, I run BlitzIT - a managed IT and web services business where I work directly with customers. I scope projects, explain options, manage expectations, coordinate vendors, document solutions, and support everything after it goes live. That combination of technical execution and customer communication is something I have had to build deliberately, and I think it is what separates infrastructure people who just keep things running from ones who actually move the needle.
I have also built and operate SaaS applications. StruxFit is a fitness training platform running on Docker, PostgreSQL, Nginx, and GitHub Actions with structured workout programming, staging and production workflows, backups, and custom progression logic. 1Lynk is a multi-tenant link management tool I built to solve the “nobody knows where anything lives” problem that shows up in almost every organization I have worked with. Both are real, running, and maintained by me.
I also built this TrevorKruse.com application page specifically for Corporate Tools because the job posting had actual personality, and a normal pasted-in cover letter felt too forgettable. It is a small example of how I approach work: understand the goal, build something useful, make it clean, make it deployable, and add just enough personality that it does not feel like corporate wallpaper.
I'm drawn to Corporate Tools specifically because the role involves real infrastructure leadership - not just ticket-based support work. The combination of data center operations, hosting, open-source tooling, team ownership, and customer impact is the kind of environment where I do my best work. I'm the kind of person who documents the weird stuff, automates the repeatable things, and tries very hard to leave systems less cursed than I found them.
I'd be glad to talk more. My background is documented above, my projects are real and running, and I have opinions about config management that I'd be happy to share.
Trevor Kruse
Background
Servers, networking, virtualization, storage, cloud, security, backups, vendor coordination, capacity planning, and hardware lifecycle work.
Windows Server, Active Directory, DNS, firewalls, VPNs, RDS/FSLogix, VMware, VxRail, and hybrid cloud environments.
Linux-based hosting, Docker, Nginx, DNS, SSL, reverse proxies, WordPress hosting, and production web infrastructure.
Requirements gathering, customer communication, project planning, expectations, vendor coordination, troubleshooting, documentation, and owning outcomes.
Work I've shipped
Custom application page built specifically for Corporate Tools
I built this page because the Corporate Tools job posting had actual personality, and a normal pasted-in cover letter felt like bringing a beige cubicle wall to a knife fight. The site is a custom landing page designed to show my cover letter, relevant infrastructure experience, and project work in a cleaner and more memorable format. It was built from a Figma design using Astro, Tailwind CSS, Docker, Nginx, and Cloudflare Tunnel. I handled the frontend build, Docker/Nginx setup, Cloudflare Tunnel deployment, DNS/domain configuration, SSL routing, and making sure the site works correctly under the /corporate-tools path.
Managed IT and web services business
BlitzIT is my managed IT and web services business. I built and manage the company website, along with customer WordPress sites, hosted web environments, and small-business technology solutions. This work has given me experience beyond just the technical side. I work directly with customers, gather requirements, plan projects, explain technical options in normal human language, manage expectations, troubleshoot issues, coordinate vendors, document solutions, and support the systems after they go live. On the technical side, I handle WordPress setup and administration, DNS/domain management, SSL configuration, hosting support, backups, site maintenance, plugin/theme management, performance troubleshooting, and general web infrastructure support.
Fitness training platform
StruxFit is a fitness training platform I built and operate. It includes structured workout programming, progression tracking, training blocks, RIR-based progression, exercise templates, admin tools, Docker-based deployment, PostgreSQL, Nginx, reverse proxying, backups, staging and production workflows, and GitHub Actions/self-hosted runner deployment work. This project is a good example of how I approach infrastructure: build something useful, make it deployable, back it up, monitor the weird behavior, fix the edge cases, and keep improving it until it becomes boring in the best possible way.
Multi-tenant SaaS link management platform
1Lynk is a multi-tenant SaaS application I built to solve a common corporate problem: important links scattered across bookmarks, SharePoint pages, emails, spreadsheets, chat messages, and tribal knowledge until nobody knows where anything lives anymore. It is designed to help teams and businesses organize internal resources, vendor portals, documentation, and frequently used tools in one central place. My contribution includes the application concept, product design, multi-tenant architecture planning, hosting setup, DNS/domain configuration, SSL, reverse proxying, Docker-based deployment, and ongoing troubleshooting.
How I work
Make it stable.
Document the weird stuff.
Automate the repeatable.
Build systems that do not require one person remembering which config file is haunted.
TOPOLOGY OVERVIEW // v2.4.1
STATUS: STABLE // DOCS: UP TO DATE // BACKUPS: VERIFIED
Reach out
If my background lines up with what Corporate Tools is building, I'd be glad to talk more.
Trevor Kruse
[email protected]Built specifically for Corporate Tools. No VLANs were harmed in the making of this page.