We loved looking through the photos. Looks like you and Tim had some great times and made great memories.
This memorial website was created in memory of our friend, colleague, mentor, and loved one, Tim Lathrop. We will remember him forever. Memorial service to be held at the Bakken Museum in Minneapolis on May 6 at 4pm.
Tributes
Leave a tributeWe loved looking through the photos. Looks like you and Tim had some great times and made great memories.
Tim had an ability to connect personally, with total trust, and in a way that made him loved by so many. He was a true leader.
I miss Tim. I send my prayers and deepest sympathies to the Lathrops.
Tim always had a unique perspective on life and was full of surprises. I remember during a drive with Tim from Huntsville AL to Atlanta GA we saw a beet stand on the side of the road. He insisted I pull over while he hopped out and bought a quart of beets. He explained he was on an Only-cabbage-and-beets diet, and already had cabbage at his hotel. The next morning he regaled me with how he'd made cabbage and beet soup using only the coffee maker in his room....yum!
Tim was one of the most caring individuals I know, and helped make my time at Medtronic one of the most special in my career. He will be surely be missed.
Who doesn’t remember Tim’s love of BBQ and even more specifically BBQ sauce. I can remember on one of Tim’s first trips down to visit me in Florida. He asked if we could stop for lunch to get BBQ. Of course I was always up for BBQ myself. However, before lunch he said we needed to stop at Walmart to get a couple gallon containers. When I asked why – he just replied “it’s for the sauce”. I wasn’t sure I understood until we got to Shorty’s and Tim asked the guy behind the counter to fill up the jugs with BBQ sauce. To say the least I was amazed. I have a theory that during retirement Tim and Judy spent the winters in Florida not to skirt the frigid Minneapolis winter but instead came to Florida each winter to stock up on his favorite BBQ sauce from Shorty’s. :) My memories of Tim will always give me a reason to smile.
Stay tuned for more stories. Miss you so much Dad! Reading all the posts from your colleagues at Medtronic makes me wish I had the chance to work for you....
Love your favorite family member, Gloria Lathrop
I feel blessed to have had Tim as a manager. He was, by any reasonable definition, a true servant leader.
My most heartfelt condolences to Judy, Rachel, and Jeff.
I will never forget the day I was hired into the field organization - I was so thrilled and proud to be a part of it! I sure wish I could have had more time with Tim, as he was an incredible man, and he truly is a part of why I'm still so proud to be in the Field organization! I pray for comfort for Tims family during this difficult time. I will never forget Tim!
He would travel with me to sites and was very gracious with all our customers/investigators. I learned that during his early years with Medtronic he was up to Toronto General visiting a Dr. David MacGregor for the old epicardial lead study. Dr. MacGregor kept telling him to call him David not doctor but Tim couldn’t quite do it – much to the doctor’s amusement. Customers really enjoyed meeting him and appreciated his attention.
He was a fierce defender of the FCEs: he fought for more appropriate salaries and bonuses (FCE’s were being “stolen” by our competition). He strongly encouraged additional training and having us help with training in-house staff (TEI). He strongly encouraged team building with annual meetings – often in Hawk’s Cay resort. This was always a successful opportunity to get to know our in-house teams and learn from our field colleagues.
We enjoyed long walks with Tim.
I am sad that he has gone and sad that I haven’t kept in touch over the years.
Bless you Tim.
He was in his glory when new products were entering clinical trials. When the FCE organization was selected to be the pilot users for the first laptop communications (using a Radio Shack TRS 80) he was ecstatic. Financially, Tim and I shared financial ideas. We both cried in October, 1987, when the stock market and Medtronic crashed to nearly 2/3 its prior value. I was afraid to tell my wife. But Tim was right, it would return.......by 2000, several more splits occurred, a great run,
I left the FCE organization in 1989, for a Medtronic career in sales, until I retired in 2015. It was a difficult decision, knowing Tim, would no longer be my manager. I wish I had kept in better contact.
He was an outstanding individual, had a great sense of humor, and a wonderful person. He would do anything for his FCE’s.
My sympathies go out to Judy, Rachael, and Jeffrey.
Bob Cohen
I think that Tim is the epitome of this poem
by Raymond Carver
Late Fragment
And did you get what
you wanted from this life, even so?
I did.
And what did you want?
To call myself beloved, to feel myself
beloved on the earth.
Leave a Tribute
We loved looking through the photos. Looks like you and Tim had some great times and made great memories.
Tim had an ability to connect personally, with total trust, and in a way that made him loved by so many. He was a true leader.
I miss Tim. I send my prayers and deepest sympathies to the Lathrops.
A Corporate Refugee Bares All
Written by Frank Freedman
Illustrated by Robb Miller
www.acorporaterefugeebaresall.com
Please Don’t Come Anymore
What Was Happening:I was hired in 1979 to be Medtronic’s Director of Clinical Research and bring much needed change to the department. I implemented project management, standard operating procedures and many other changes. Within a year, the department’s corporate image changed from a “liability” to an asset.
What I Learned: Sometimes the job requires a manager to be a coach. If you take the time to do so, it can be a labor of love.
The clinical research department’s role was to obtain the clinical experience required to support the needs of many other departments (design, marketing, regulatory affairs, etc.), before a new pacemaker or pacing lead could be sold. It was no secret that this department was in disarray, when I became its director. On my very first day as director, I was greeted with a continuing stream of telephone complaints, some angrily expressed using four-letter expletives.
The professional staff was constantly subjected to criticism from others at Medtronic about what type of clinical experience was needed and how to obtain it. Frankly, they were demoralized when I took over.
Critical changes were necessary. That was why I was hired. I quickly convened a staff meeting to listen to their concerns and begin the process of making substantial changes. But I honestly did not have any specific ideas about what changes were necessary. It was hard to know if I would need a protective suit of amour, a big box of Kleenex or both to get through this meeting.
One by one, the staff told me about problems they faced. To their surprise (and mine), after a moment’s thought I announced that they would now lead their clinical research studies differently. Those in charge of clinical studies would operate as “clinical study managers.” This was a totally foreign concept to them. It was not how the department previously operated. As clinical study managers, their job would be to seek consensus from product development team members about what clinical experience was needed, what physicians to use as investigators and how to conduct the study. But if consensus was not possible, the clinical study manager alone would make the final decisions. It may have been the first use of project management to lead clinical studies in the Twin Cities or the entire medical device industry.
They expressed great reluctance to accept their new role. I was pointedly told that my approach was not how things were done. I countered by reminding them how difficult their jobs currently were … constantly reacting to criticism and unreasonable requests. Managing clinical research studies, rather than reacting to circumstances, would make them far more productive and make their jobs easier.
I decided to use the pending Spectrax® Pacemaker Clinical Study as the vehicle to introduce the corporation to the new way clinical research would be conducted. Spectrax was a revolutionary new type of pacemaker, one that could improve patient outcomes and boost the corporation’s bottom line. Its leader, Tim Lathrop, was now the Spectrax “clinical study manager.” Tim was a smart, popular scientist who had an engaging smile and warm personality. I don’t think he had led any project in his life. Meetings he convened about the Spectrax clinical study were always disasters.
I also told Tim that I expected him to get at least 95 percent of clinical data expected from the Spectrax clinical study. In the past, getting far less clinical data returned sufficed because very little was required to evaluate older pacemaker models. Getting 95 percent of the data returned to us was critical for two compelling reasons: New FDA regulations would require it before approving Spectrax sales in the U.S. Marketing was depending upon it to support a planned, aggressive Spectrax sales campaign.
Tim understood why I picked the Spectrax clinical study to proactively introduce these changes to the corporation. But he was very hesitant to assume his new responsibilities. A colleague and I became his coaching staff. We talked with Tim daily to make him comfortable about assuming them. Each day for about a week, Tim left Medtronic more and more confident that he could assume this new role as “clinical study manager.” Each morning he would return to work with uncertainty about his ability to do so. We stopped coaching him when he started seeing the bigger picture. The corporation could no longer tolerate clinical studies whose outcomes were marginally useful due to confusion about what clinical experience was needed and how to obtain it.
To completely allay his fears, I sent a memo to the Spectrax development team about Tim’s new role as a clinical study manager and his new responsibilities. I informed them that I planned to accompany Tim at the next team meeting in case any questions arose. At the meeting, I started to explain his new role and responsibilities. To his credit, he took over explaining his new responsibilities and how the Spectrax clinical study would be conducted.
After the meeting, Tim’s first words to me were: “Please don’t come to any more of these meetings. If you do, that could detract from my authority.” He might have expected me to be angry. Instead and with a big smile, I shook his hand and exclaimed, “Congratulations … You are where I need you to be.”
All subsequent meetings Tim convened about the Spectrax clinical study were very productive. He became an outstanding clinical study manager.
The Spectrax Clinical Research Study was one of the most successful, effective studies ever performed at Medtronic. It drew praises from all across the company. I was especially pleased that my expectations for data were met; more than 95 percent of expected data was obtained for this study. This study reset the bar for clinical research study excellence, primarily using a project management approach to pursue it. Tim’s success using my new approach for conducting clinical studies was a real “high.”
But Daddy ...
What I Learned: Very little is required to show a big interest in someone.
I happened to see Tim Lathrop talking to his young son one day. His son proudly showed him a gold star he earned from his teacher on a picture he drew. Tim congratulated his son, reached into his pocket and gave him a quarter as a reward. It was a special moment between a parent and a child.
I remembered this special moment a few weeks later when I reviewed the first draft of Tim’s Spectrax Clinical Study Report. I made a relatively large number of editorial changes and comments in red ink throughout the report. Since I remembered the special moment when Tim praised his son’s drawing, I printed “Great Job” in big bold letters and pasted a large red star I bought specifically for this occasion on the title page. Would Tim show it to his son? How would his son react?
Tim told me about his son’s response to seeing “Great Job” and the star on the title page. His son gave Tim a nickel from his piggy bank and praised Tim. But he became confused when he looked through Tim’s report. “Daddy,” he asked “how come you got a red star when you made so many mistakes?’
Tim was very pleased that I remembered this touching incident. He took great delight in telling others what happened after his son saw his reportAn Exceptional Leader
My thoughts are with Judy and the entire Lathrop family. I am so sorry for your loss. Tim has been a major force and presence in the lives of so many. I am grateful that I worked for Tim at Medtronic between 2003 and 2005. While two years is not a long time, the impact of those two years has carried forward in all the years since. There are a number of stories that I treasure from my time at Medtronic and getting to work with Tim and the FCEs. I’ll pick one of the favorites to post here – it is one that I tell almost every student or early career professional when visiting about career goals.
One of the greatest professional opportunities I’ve ever been given was to be hired to manage the Training and Education Initiative (TEI) that Tim and the FCEs envisioned and created. The purpose of TEI was to train clinical staff on the technical capabilities of Medtronic devices. One day, early in the new role, I overheard someone ask Tim why he hired a pharmacist to manage TEI considering how technical the training content was. I don’t recall that I even knew who asked Tim the question. It wasn’t in a judgmental or condescending tone… just a curious tone. I too, was just as curious to hear the answer because while it was such an honor to serve in the position, I knew I had a steep learning curve ahead. With my ears perked and trying to be as inconspicuous as possible, I listened (eavesdropped) closely from my cubicle. Tim’s response has turned out to be the most influential statement of my professional career. Tim replied, “she went to pharmacy school, she finished a professional degree program, she learned how to learn.” What an incredible gift to give someone so early in her career. It was so meaningful to overhear that conversation – it has empowered and emboldened me in every role since.
The other meaningful gift that came from Tim was the opportunity to work with the FCEs and in-house clinical research staff. It was a collaborative and supportive culture and one that I consider to be the gold standard. I hold my memories from Medtronic in such high regard because of Tim’s exceptional leadership style and the example he set for all of us who were fortunate to work for him and with him. We are all better for knowing Tim Lathrop.
Another walking story
Tim has told me about many times walking with Tom Zicardi on the " canyon walk". I think it is like a 5 to 6 hr hike. It comes out on the picturesque Hwy 101. This particular walk Tom's wife with 2 little ones 4 and under said she would pick them up at a predetermined spot. It seems Tim and Tom weren't there. Poor Kelly drove around for 2 hours looking for them. When they got into the car there was an uncomfortable silence. After a few minutes the 4 year old announced quite loudly " THERE WILL BE NO DESSERT FOR YOU TONIGHT TIM LATHROP !"