From Service to Leadership: Ben Sorensen - S. Florida Business & Wealth

From Service to Leadership: Ben Sorensen

NAVY RESERVE | Chaplain Fort Lauderdale City Commissioner, CEO of Sorensen Consulting, Inc.

There is a certain steadiness to Ben Sorensen’s leadership, the kind forged in environments where decisions carry consequence and clarity is currency. As a Fort Lauderdale City Commissioner representing District 4, CEO of Sorensen Consulting, Inc., and a Navy Reserve Chaplain with 18 years of service in the U.S. Navy Reserve, Sorensen operates in overlapping arenas of service. The uniform may shift, but the mission does not.

As he reflects on nearly two decades in the Navy Reserve, one of the most formative lessons came from working in a joint environment in the Pentagon after 9/11, when no single branch or agency could address the threat alone. “We had to bring together different services, intelligence agencies, and disciplines… to operate as one mission-focused team,” he says.

The breakthrough, he notes, “was not just better data, but better collaboration: aligning around a shared purpose, building trust across silos, and making decisions in a complex, fast-moving environment.”

That joint-force mindset now shapes how he governs as an elected official in Fort Lauderdale. “The hardest challenges are rarely solved within one department,” Sorensen explains. “Progress comes from convening the right stakeholders, creating clarity around the mission, and fostering an environment where diverse perspectives can integrate rather than compete.” As a City Commissioner, that means coordinated action rather than fragmented effort, long-term planning rather than reactive politics.

Service at home, he believes, must be equally mission-driven. “The most important way veterans can continue serving at home… is by serving other veterans,” he says. Shared experience builds trust quickly, especially around housing stability, employment, and mental health.

That conviction led him to co-found Mission United of the United Way of Broward County, a veterans-serving-veterans model that coordinates housing, job placement, legal support, and wraparound services. “When veterans are at the table designing and delivering solutions, engagement is higher and outcomes are stronger,” he says. The approach has directly informed his work to reduce veteran homelessness in Fort Lauderdale by aligning local government, nonprofits, and veteran-led organizations around a unified strategy.

For Sorensen, resilience is neither abstract nor performative. “Wellness is not a buzzword,” he says. “It is operational readiness for life.” Mental clarity, physical discipline, strong family connection, and faith grounding must work together. “Resilience is built before the pressure hits, not during it.”

His daily practice reflects that discipline: “A daily early-morning centering routine: prayer, a workout that balances cardio and strength training, and reviewing the day’s top priorities before the demands start coming in.”

He is candid about what he wishes civilians understood. “Most veterans and reservists don’t stop serving when they take off the uniform,” he says. Especially for reservists, the navigation of “two worlds” carries invisible operational and emotional weight. Real support, he suggests, looks like partnership: hiring veterans into meaningful roles, supporting veteran-led initiatives, and engaging them as problem-solvers.

“Veterans are not just former service members,” Sorensen says. “They are mission-driven leaders who are wired to serve long after active duty.”

For the next generation serving or looking to serve, his advice is both pragmatic and expansive. “See the uniform as a foundation, not the finish line,” he says. Leadership, teamwork, resilience, and service are transferable. Transition, he adds, begins with a new question: “What is my purpose now?”

As a Navy Reserve Chaplain, Sorensen learned that compassion and accountability are not competing forces but “partners in responsible leadership.” Listening first, lowering the emotional temperature, and making ethically grounded decisions remain central to how he approaches city governance as an elected official. “Leadership is ultimately about caring for people while still making hard decisions for the greater good.”

You May Also Like
Duty, Leadership, and the Long View 

 A veteran physician reflects on leadership, responsibility, and patient care beyond the clinic.  Atif M. Hussein, M.D., Medical Director and Program Director of the Hematology/Oncology Fellowship Program at Memorial Cancer

Read More
A smiling man in a white doctor’s coat and navy blue tie stands against a light background. The coat has embroidered text and a heart logo on the chest. South Florida Business & Wealth
All Flights Cancelled 

Spirit Airlines ceased all operations on May 2nd. What comes next?  For 34 years, Spirit was one of air travel’s most talked-about airlines. Known for budget flights with few included

Read More
Close-up view of a modern jet engine turbine attached to a yellow airplane, parked on an airport tarmac under a blue sky. South Florida Business & Wealth
Developers Break Ground on New Condominium Near Aventura Mall

 Growin Group and Property Pro Partners broke ground on EDEN, a new luxury residential development, located at 2557 NE 180th Street — near Aventura Mall. Boutique Residences The development will feature 32 luxury residences

Read More
A modern multi-story building with large glass balconies, palm trees on both sides, cars parked in front, and purple flowers in the foreground under a clear blue sky. South Florida Business & Wealth
Florida’s Insurance Reset, Through a National Lens 

Rocky Steele is Senior Vice President of Business Development at Trucordia, where he leads strategic growth initiatives and partnership development across key markets, including Florida. With deep experience in brokerage expansion and

Read More
A man with short brown hair wearing a gray suit jacket and white dress shirt smiles at the camera against a dark background. South Florida Business & Wealth
Other Posts
The Executive’s Guide to Financial Clarity

Financial success rarely arrives with simplicity. For executives and business owners, growing wealth often introduces a new layer of complexity, where liquidity, tax exposure, and family dynamics demand the same

Read More
Bald man wearing a blue checked suit jacket and light blue shirt, smiling at the camera, with a bright, blurred white background. South Florida Business & Wealth
HR Roundtable – Continuing the Conversation with StevenDouglas and SFBW

Recently, HR professionals throughout South Florida gathered at the Sunrise, Florida headquarters of StevenDouglas to discuss one of the most-discussed issues facing the corporate world: How is AI transforming the

Read More
A group of 19 professionally dressed people pose together in an office lobby; some are seated on a round white couch, others stand behind, with a Severna Douglas SFW banner in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth
Powering the Creator Economy 

In South Florida’s increasingly influential creator economy, Olivia Ormos is less focused on content than on what powers it.  As founder of mavn, the Miami entrepreneur is building the infrastructure layer

Read More
A woman in a black outfit stands holding a microphone in front of a MAVN sign, with two black chairs and display boards reading “influencer marketing done right” and “where creators, brands, + culture collide.”. South Florida Business & Wealth
Building Through the Bottleneck 

 Demand remains strong across South Florida, but rising costs, stalled deals, and execution challenges are reshaping how projects move from concept to completion  South Florida’s construction market is not slowing down. It

Read More
A mature man with gray hair and glasses, wearing a gray suit and white shirt, stands indoors and buttons his jacket. There is a brick wall with framed art and a beige couch in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth