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Christopher Lochhead
February 3, 2026
The Life Lesson That Matters: A Love Letter To Rockin´ Rob Burgess
I met Rob Burgess in the early 2000s.
He was the CEO of Macromedia.
I was running a small, boutique category-design consulting firm.
Rob hired me to help category-design a new software market (working alongside his partner and CMO at the time, Al Ramadan. Thanks to Rob. Al and I have become brothers.
What followed was some of the most fun I´ve ever had in business.
The kind of fun that only happens when smart, intense, unconventional people trust each other completely and go for something bold.
Rob was a legend.
He started with nothing.
Literally at the bottom.
As an inside sales rep in Toronto, Canada.
And he rose all the way to become one of the most important leaders in Silicon Valley. Rob built products, companies, categories and teams that changed the future.
After selling Macromedia to Adobe in 2005 (at what most would call a young age) Rob made a clear choice: family first.
His legendary wife Jane, and their three boys, were his center of gravity. (That and hockey fights.)
That didn´t mean he slowed down.
Not Rob.
He stayed deeply active as a board member and mentor to many. In 2011, at 53, he joined the board of NVIDIA. Long before it became the foundational platform for AI.
Rob was always early.
Always on the leading edge.
Always creating different futures.
From the earliest days of graphics... to media... to multimedia... to the internet... to mobile... to cloud... to AI.
Rob was there.
Making it happen.
Few careers span that much innovation.
Fewer still shape it.
Rob was a leader´s leader.
Super smart.
Radically unconventional. Wickedly demanding.
And funny.
He laughed like almost no CEO I´ve ever known (especially in bad times). When things were hardest, that laugh reminded everyone: we´re alive, this matters, let´s go.
This past Saturday, I attended his celebration of life.
And all afternoon, as I celebrated (and cried)with his family, friends, and colleagues, I kept expecting Rob to jump out from behind a wall and yell:
"JUST KIDDING."
Because Rob loved fun.
And fooling around.
When Rob and Jane got married, they didn´t tell anyone. They invited friends and family to what everyone thought was a party.
Then Rob showed up in a suit. Jane walked in wearing a wedding dress. The music blasted White Wedding by Billy Idol. And boom.
Surprise wedding.
When I became CMO of Mercury Interactive in 2003, on my second day the receptionist called to say flowers had arrived.
Then more.
Then more.
Bouquet after bouquet.
Rob hadn´t sent flowers.
He sent a flower shop.
(Classic Rob.)
When Joey Ramone died, Rob called me and said, "We´re having dinner. Tonight."
We wore Ramones t-shirts, ate, drank, and talked deep into a Menlo Park night about why the Ramones are legendary.
Rob understood legends.
Rob created enormous value.
Products used by millions, companies that generated billions for employees and shareholders.
And Rob was tough.
He didn´t suffer fools.
He was brutally demanding.
Of himself most of all.
If you didn´t perform, you were gone. But if you did? You were trusted, backed, and pushed to do the greatest work of your life.
Rob was beloved.
And deeply loving.
His life is a masterclass in what it means to be legendary:
-Be tough
-Be driven
-Be aggressively curious
-Be wickedly (non-obviously) smart
-Focus maniacally on results
-And be 100% yourself
There´s been a lot of talk over the last decade about "authentic leadership." Much of it from people who are anything but authentic.
Rob was 100% Rob.
Different.
Non-cookie-cutter.
Not remotely conservative.
He followed his different.
And became a lion of Silicon Valley.
Rob is only 68.
He wasn´t sick.
He had no idea his time was up.
In classic Rob form, just before Christmas, he went a little nuts. Buying two carloads of gifts, buying out the NVIDIA swag store to give things away.
Then he went to bed.
And never woke up.
His legacy is massive.
The end of Rob´s life is another legendary lesson he taught me.
We have no idea how long we have.
If you´re like me. You don´t think that your life could end now. I go through life, feeling like I have lot´s a time.
And yet.
We have no idea how long we have.
Rob was in his prime.
As a husband, a dad to three grown sons, and as a board leader helping guide one of the most important technology companies of our time.
So this morning, feeling the heavy weight of losing my friend, I made a decision.
Today, I´m gonna live like Rockin´ Rob Burgess.
I love you Rob.
Hey ho, let´s GO!
Donald L Corbett
January 11, 2026
Rob admired a pair of red patent leather Adidas track shoes i wore as a member of Victoria Park Athletic Club in Don Mills. Robs running career was cut short with Oshgood Shlaters ( sp?) . I think Jane's running more than made up for his loss of a sport he loved.
About 8 years ago at his compound on Lake Rousseau he shook his head declaring. " i would have never worn those shoes and kinda admired you for having the gumtion to wear them"
I made a gentlemen bet that my daughter could return to his amazing garden...Jane's too, and identify over 90% of the plants. My Em Lou did just that...often furnishing the Latin names.
The look on his face was priceless.
He was a humble guy and I will never forget how much he loved a small wood paneled room in his boat house...he seemed at peace in that space.
He left us too darn soon!!
Francine McLaughlin
January 5, 2026
RIP Rob
Jane, my thoughts and prayers are with you and your sons.
I am so very sorry for your loss.
John Lindsay CPA
January 3, 2026
I knew Rob from his McMaster days. Always a nice guy to be around.
Gord McRobie
January 2, 2026
Dear Jane and Boys, I was very sorry to hear of Rob's passing, my sincere condolences. A life lost leaves a huge void and may the great memories you created together fill that void.
With Sympathy,
Gord McRobie.
Michael Hallett
January 2, 2026
Rob worked for me for a short while at Honeywell Information Systems in Canada in the very late 70"s . I knew he was destined for success immediately after the first day. I passion and drive to succeed had the power of the Sun (where he later worked incidentally). We both moved to California, stayed in touch, and made our way in the technology business here. He was a success as a business person, investor and human being.
Rest in Peace my friend
Mike Hallett
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