
THE WISDOM OF THE BEATLES
Be inspired by the most iconic band of our generation.
You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)
Humor is a leadership asset—a weird, wild, absurd reminder not to take ourselves too seriously.
July 23

No Beatles song captures pure, unfiltered silliness quite like "You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)." This relatively unknown six-minute experimental romp reveals something precious: The Beatles completely letting loose in the studio, creating voices, characters, and musical chaos with absolutely no commercial agenda. It's The Beatles at their most playful and human.
Amusing as it sounds, this track represents something vital for any high-performing team. Recorded sporadically between 1967 and 1969, it became their pressure valve, a space where four of the world's most scrutinized musicians could just be silly together. Listen closely and you'll hear them laughing, experimenting, and creating purely for the joy of creation.
Moments like these aren't frivolous; they're essential for team cohesion. When organizations face intense pressure, periods of sanctioned silliness and pure fun become crucial for esprit de corps. The Beatles understood that you can't sustain creativity and collaboration without spaces to decompress, be ridiculous, and remember why you enjoy working together in the first place.
Every successful team needs its own version of "You Know My Name". Great teams often allow unguarded moments where perfectionism takes a backseat to connection. Whether it's office pranks, team games, or just permission to be silly during stressful times, these experiences create the psychological safety that allows real innovation to flourish.
Today, I will create or encourage one moment of pure, pressure-free fun with my team or family, understanding that silliness isn't the opposite of productivity—it's often its foundation.
When did your team last have permission to be completely silly together? What kind of "pressure valve" might strengthen your collaborative relationships?
Join November's Nostalgia and Gratitude
The Beatles' "In My Life" wasn't just nostalgia. It was strategic memory management. When John cataloged the people and places that shaped him, he demonstrated something profound: organizational memory and authentic appreciation create competitive advantage. This November, we're exploring how gratitude builds relationship capital and strategic nostalgia strengthens teams. From Ringo's systematic thankfulness to Paul's preservation of foundational partnerships, discover how four musicians transformed personal connections into lasting legacy, and how their approach provides a blueprint for building networks that compound over time.
Are you looking for deeper learning? Check out the full post for a 15 minute read.
