Tag Archives: Luke Bucklin

Follow your bliss – honoring Luke’s memory

A few days ago, Nerdery CEO and co-founder Mike Derheim wrote this in an all-staff email:

As many of you probably already know, next Tuesday October 25th is the 1-year anniversary of the plane crash that killed our friend and former President, Luke Bucklin and his sons. I’ve been thinking for quite a while about how we could best recognize the anniversary at The Nerdery. Many of you have offered a bunch of great ideas, like having a moment of silence, making it a company holiday, or holding some type of memorial event. On a personal level, I want to extend my gratitude to all of you that are thinking about our friend, and offering suggestions on how to honor his memory. He was a lucky guy to have so many people who cared about him. Although I think that all of those ideas are touching and completely appropriate – my difficulty in figuring out what to do stems from the fact that I don’t think that Luke would want us to remember him in such a somber way, nor do I think he’d want some type of grand gesture or memorial happening in his honor each year. Those that knew him probably know that wasn’t really his style.

If there’s one part of Luke’s legacy that you should know about, it’s that he cared about people and their happiness much more than anyone else I know. A famous quote of his (which I’m sure he’d be the first to admit he stole from someone else), was “follow your bliss.” He believed that people needed to chase the things that made them happy in life. Our company’s vision – to be the best place on earth for nerds to work – was the vehicle he used to make that a reality for many of us. The more that I reflect on the things that he did and the decisions he made, the more I realize how important that was to him.

Instead of doing something grand to memorialize the day, I’d like to do something a little bit more low-key, un-produced, un-organized, and focused on the part of The Nerdery that really mattered to Luke – you guys and your being part of the team – Co-Presidents if you will. What I would like to do on Tuesday is ask that you take the opportunity to spend a little bit more time than normal to hang out and get to know each other a little better. The company is going to bring in lunch around 12:00 and set it up in the Nerditorium (in the kitchen area for you Chicago folks I guess). Please come in and spend at least part of your lunch with us. There won’t be a program. Nobody’s going to talk. Instead, please take the time to talk to someone you’ve not talked to before, get the name of someone you’ve only seen in the hall, or maybe just understand “bliss” for someone that you already know really well. If you do any or all of those things, you’ll be honoring Luke’s memory in a way that, I assure you, he would appreciate.

Another thing that we’re finally ready to announce is something that many of you have been asking about for a long time. We’ve created a repository of all of Luke’s famous 2AM emails in the Mainframe. If you didn’t have a chance to meet Luke or haven’t heard – he had a strange habit of waiting until the middle of the night to finally find the inspiration to send out an all-staff email.  Interestingly, I think that his cloudy thinking from lack of sleep actually make the message clearer for all of us, and helped him hone in on the important parts of what we do. His humor and ability to inspire people to achieve in these messages is a big part of our history, and definitely worth reading when you have some time.

 

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Dear nonprofits, nerds, friends at #webchallenge

This weekend, well over four thousand hours of professional services will be spent helping 18 nonprofits do whatever it is they do, only better, with a new website. Whether you’re on the giving end or the receiving end of this bargain, thanks for playing your part.

The Nerdery considers our Overnight Website Challenge as our finest hour – all 24 of them. But we would be remiss if we didn’t also acknowledge our company’s darkest hour; the tragic loss of our co-founder, president and dear friend, Luke Bucklin, who passed away last fall in a plane crash with his sons Nate, Nick and Noah. Luke never missed a minute of the first three years of our nonprofit nerdathon. With the exception of when we found him napping in a stairway, he was a tireless champion of this initiative and a dedicated volunteer.

Last year, Luke and his wife Ginger were the first volunteers to arrive on Saturday morning, and Luke spent the next several hours making pot-after-pot of coffee. Another volunteer – who didn’t know any of us – pointed Luke out as a fellow volunteer with a particular knack for making everyone else feel like they were doing something truly special, just by being here. That’s as true today as it was then, and I thank all of you for that.

Not listed as an official nonprofit this year is BFF, aka, The Bucklin Family Foundation, a new nonprofit founded by Ginger Bucklin, who’s here to brainstorm ideas for a website and apps that will help families connect through interactive technology, and remain Best Friends, Forever. At some point during these 24 hours, you’ll need a break. If you want to think about something else for awhile, Ginger welcomes thinkers like you to share your ideas.

Yours truly,

Mike Derheim, CEO, The Nerdery

MN Governor thanks WY for search efforts

Our hearts were warmed when we spotted Ginger’s post about Tim Pawlenty’s letter to Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal thanking him for his state’s efforts to find Luke, Nick, Nate, and Noah.
Letter to WY.jpg (600×800)

In the letter Pawlenty writes, “Given the very tight restraints of time and daylight, the remote and rugged terrain, and the uncertainty of weather, we recognize the high priority you placed on the search, rescue and recovery that brought the Bucklin Boys home. While the result was not the miracle we hoped for, it brings peace to our hearts knowing that the boys were found and brought home to us.”

You can read the entire text of the letter on Ginger’s blog.

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Toys for Tots drive: In memory of The Bucklin Boys, donate gifts for needy 12-14 year olds

In memory of Luke and the Bucklin boys, we’re joining a Toys for Tots drive started by Nerdery alumnus Mitch Buckland. Mitch goes back about 20 years with Luke; now a developer at Japs-Olson, he’s rallying his current and former colleagues to donate gifts appropriate for youth between the ages of 12 and 14, in honor of Nick (14), Nate (14), Noah (12) and Luke (40, going on about 14).

Historically, Toys for Tots receives ample gifts for small children – actual tots – but struggles to fulfill the unmet needs of underserved early teens. But not this year, eh?

This is where you come in. Please help us by dropping off your donation to the Nerdery, at 9555 James Av S in Bloomington. Donated gifts must be brand new (no hand-me-downs, please), unopened (don’t break the seal), and definitely not gift-wrapped (so Toys for Tots can re-gift per appropriate recipient).

We’ll be collecting gift donations from staff and friends of The Nerdery/ Bucklin family, on a table designated for Toys for Tots in Nerdery Science Theater, between now and end-of-day on December 17.

Toys for Tots table at the Nerdery

Toys for Tots table at the Nerdery

P.S. I’m honored to be included in the circle of Nerdery bloggers. It’s quite an elite group, or at least was one before I joined.

Filed under Events, Nerdery Culture

Lego Luke: The making of a nerdy tribute to our fallen leader

Last week @the_nerdery tweeted about how some cultures commemorate their leaders in stone or on canvas, none of these mundane materials would do for Luke. No, instead The Nerdery’s memorial is in the nerdiest of media: Legos. Today, we’ve got a little Q&A with the nerd behind the portrait.
legoluke

This amazing tribute in one our meeting rooms is the work of Dan Piscitiello a Nerdery programmer who was looking for a fitting way to honor Luke and something that could be enjoyed by the other co-presidents.

“I kind of wanted it to be out of the way, so when you first see the portrait it takes you by surprise,” Dan said. “The Legos in Brick House seemed like the perfect media in the perfect place.”

So what did it take to put together the portrait? Dan said he used his phone’s camera, a computer, Photoshop, and a printer.

He explains his process like this: “I started by taking pictures of all the different colored Legos in Brick House, then I took color samples of these images into Photoshop so I would know the color palette I was dealing with. For the picture of Luke, I just pulled his Nerdery profile picture off our website. After that it was ten or so steps in Photoshop as I played with different color schemes, posterization, and dithering options. At that point I enlarged the whole thing, placed a grid that represented individual pixels and hit print.”

The portrait took Dan about two weeks to complete because he faced a few setbacks along the way.

“One of my original color choices ran out of Legos early on,” he said. “At that point I had to dis-assemble and revisit Photoshop to pick a new color scheme. That first night I think I worked on it for about four hours. The next night I worked on it until I ran out of Legos.”

Running out of Legos was the biggest setback he face, and some days he’d spend a few hours scrounging The Nerdery looking for the pieces he needed.

“Some Nerds advised I check Simon’s desk,” Dan said. “His kids like to play with the Legos. Other Nerds offered to bring in their own Legos from home so I could finish. Some even offered to pay for the additional Legos and one SDM [software development manager] even authorized me to go get what I needed and the company would cover it.

“I went to the Lego store at the mall, had a lovely conversation with a very enthusiastic Lego store employee and decided that I should probably calculate the colors and sizes I needed instead of just blindly buying them. But when I came to work the next day I found out that Jessica also went to the Lego store the night before and had picked up what I needed to finish.

“That night I stayed after Bottle Cap, listening to a Nerd Day’s Night throwing down in the Theater and finished the portrait. I don’t know how many Legos were ultimately used, but I think they cover roughly a 100 x 90 pixel (or should I say, “peg?”) area.”

Though Jess kept Dan supplied with Legos, and a lot of Nerds offered to help, the Lego Luke portrait was a solo project.

“It was really kind of a therapeutic exercise for me,” he said. “A way to honor and remember Luke that hopefully the other Nerds would appreciate too.”

As some may know, The Nerdery is no stranger to creating homages to the people/characters we like out of unusual objects. There’s Rubik’s Mario and Luigi, and our famous Conan Cubed. So we asked Dan, how does Lego Luke stack up to Conan?

“I love Conan, and the Conan Rubik’s portraits were my original inspiration for a Luke portrait,” he said. “At the time I was thinking we should make a giant Rubik’s portrait of Luke for one of the walls in The Nerdery. Ever since then the idea of a Nerdy Luke portrait has been bubbling around in my head. In terms of nerdiness, I think Rubik’s Conan and Lego Luke are pretty evenly matched but for obvious reasons I think the Luke portrait bears more sentimental weight for those who knew him.”

Finally, we asked him what Luke would think of the memorial?

“I’d like to think Luke would get a kick out of it,” Dan said. “He’d probably have some self-effacing, witty remark, like I “perfectly captured his blocky chin,” or something in that vein. He was such a fun and inspiring guy to work for, we all miss him tremendously.”

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Help Remember

As words of support flooded The Nerdery and Bucklin home through days of hope but uncertainty, and then sadness, the most common thing most of us heard from each other – and from so many of you – was how we wished we could help. It’s a helpless feeling to think there’s little you can really do to help. Then Luke’s pastor asked if we could help set up a prayer website. Then my colleagues helped build a site thanking the search team for their help. We hope this helped others, but we know it helped us not feel so helpless. And we believe Luke would be proud, but just to be sure several of his friends built another site for family and friends of Nate, Nick, Noah and Luke to share memories. Help. Remember.

http://memories.lukeandginger.com/

Information on Saturday’s memorial service can be found at http://memories.lukeandginger.com/service.

bucklinboys

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CEO and Co-President(s)

When Luke’s plane went missing I told our staff I would do my best to communicate with them as openly as he always has. In so many ways, Luke is a tough act to follow – but in keeping with his tradition of publicly sharing staff memos – when appropriate – on our blog, here’s the note I sent to Nerdery staff last Friday. Also, below my note is a story about Luke in today’s Star Tribune.

Like many of you, I’ve been re-reading emails from Luke. I’ve spent a good amount of time doing this. This is time I won’t get back and wouldn’t if I could.

After going over contingency plans and meeting with our executive team, we’ve decided that I will have the tall order of taking over as Nerdery CEO.

You’ll have fewer words in your inbox from me, but I’ll try to choose them well. I have a tough act to follow. But so do you.

We are not naming, nor are we seeking, a new President. Luckily for all of us, a good idea was hatched for succession planning – one that includes you. It also depends on you and, presently, about 160 of your fellow Co-Presidents.

Luke’s vision of Co-Presidents emerging from every corner of The Nerdery has already been realized. We’ve seen it in the great many of you, whether you glimpsed it or not. We need you to see yourself owning this leadership role, right now and from here forward. If it helps, picture Luke in that old Uncle Sam poster that said, “I Want You.” Now, picture me, present day, humbly saying, “Your Nerdery Needs You.” We really do.

Star Tribune, Neal St Anthony: ”Bucklin leaves legacy of leaders”

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Remembering Luke

Our deepest sympathies go out to Luke’s family and all who love him and his sons Nick, Nate and Noah. We’re forever grateful to all who bravely stepped up in search efforts in Wyoming, and we’re incredibly moved by the overwhelming support from the community for Luke’s family and friends.

We will sorely miss Luke as our leader. But we’ll miss him far more as our friend. Everyone who knew Luke came away better for it.

While always a programmer at heart, Luke’s entrepreneurial spirit touched every facet of our business. Everyone here revered him for his personable leadership style and good nature. In his epic all-staff email that promoted all his Nerdery colleagues as his Co-Presidents, he wrote that during the early days of our company he did it all, but now he no longer had to. Always humble, he said that thanks to all of us, his workday now consisted of “Connect Four, meetings, and Connect Three (red chips are wild)”. But everyone knew he could do it all, and we watched him go wherever he was needed most, day-to-day, without ever losing sight of the bigger picture of where he wanted to take the company.

Putting his family first, Luke was in Wyoming vacationing when we last made the 2010 Fast 50 list of fast-growing private companies, but first he had this published exchange with Biz Journal:

Editor Kim Johnson: “Tips for managing and motivating people?”

Luke: “Go beyond just treating employees fairly. Understand their career goals, and work to help them achieve success. Don’t make them earn your trust – give them your trust to make decisions, and stand behind them when they do.”

He said it and meant it and lived it well. Luke believed in giving back to our community, and under his leadership The Nerdery was honored in 2010 with The Quality of Life Award and The Jefferson Award for corporate philanthropy through The Nerdery Overnight Website Challenge, at which volunteers have so far donated more than a million dollars worth of web development services to 39 nonprofit organizations. Luke called this a good start.

Growing The Nerdery’s capabilities, staff and revenue tells only part of Luke’s success story as a business leader – but it’s not what meant the most to him. Cobbling together a culture and company where likeminded people wanted to work and play with him mattered more. When a programmer dreamed up our now biannual Pentathanerd competition, Luke jumped right into the first Summer Games and promptly won a gold medal playing Boggle. When asked what he was most proud of about The Nerdery, he said “The Nerdery.” When The Nerdery was #1 on Biz Journal’s Great Places to Work list, Luke’s “I-told-you-so!” memo to staff gained wider audience when it appeared on this blog.

When times got tough, Luke stood right up and said so. His emails weren’t as funny those times, but his integrity was in every word. Even as the leader of a privately owned company, he held himself publicly accountable when we faltered, as he did in this blog post.

Beyond all that, Luke was the kind of guy that would wear a tux to work on the day he’d get a pie thrown in his face for the sake of raising money to fight cancer – something worthy of due respect and worth watching over and over again.

Luke’s sense of humor was all-inclusive and never missed an opportunity to laugh loudest at himself. He took it characteristically well when we lampooned him on his fortieth birthday. We wish he’d have had many more.

Whether you knew Luke or not, I hope knowing more about the kind of person he was makes you smile. His humanity can’t help but poke through even the darkest clouds. As brave a face as we try to put on, we’ll not be the same without Luke. But we will honor his legacy, always, and we’ll follow his lead by living up to the example he set for all of us. Thank you for keeping Luke’s family and friends in your thoughts and prayers.

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Messages buoy search team

From this morning’s press release at http://www.lukeandginger.com/node/229:

“Searchers were buoyed Saturday when messages of prayers and support directed at the search team and their families were received. The messages came from friends and colleagues of the missing family members. ‘I wish we could go out again right now,’ said ground searcher Andy Basset after reading the bundles of hand written notes. Basset and three other ground team members had just been plucked from a blizzard and returned to the Incident Command Center.”

Words to further encourage at http://thanks.lukeandginger.com/

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Heroes

First, the latest news from Wyoming is at LukeandGinger.com. Our staff gathered a bit ago and Tom tried to read (and Bill stepped in to finish reading) part of an all-staff email Luke sent us a couple months ago. One of the great pleasures of working at The Nerdery is reading – and then re-reading – all-staff emails from Luke, and here’s an excerpt of his 1,230-word memo on who we are:

“I remember a day when there were no managers, no directors, no coordinators and no specialists. We only had Presidents. Well, maybe one President and a couple of Co-Presidents. Forget about your titles. Put your business card on the desk in front of you. Look at it. I am here to tell you that this is not your title. This card does not define you. You are a Co-President. You are bigger than your defined role, and you are much more than your job title. Play your part – transcend your job title, be a hero.”

Today, our heroes are the brave men and women on the search team in Wyoming. And today we’re all wearing these.

wristy_color

#LukeComeHome.

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