By David Kidd, BPR

Steve Jobs was famous for a creative ritual that sounded deceptively simple:
start with a clean table.
Whenever Apple was stuck—too many product lines, too much noise, too much legacy thinking—Jobs would wipe the metaphorical table clean and ask: “If we were starting today, what would we build?”
It wasn’t housekeeping. It was liberation.
A way to kill assumptions, reset priorities, and force clear, decisive thinking.
Radio programmers could use exactly the same reset.
Radio loves its heritage and sometimes that heritage quietly strangles innovation.
Clocks from 20 years ago, legacy benchmarks that no one listens for anymore, music scheduling rules that haven’t changed in years… they accumulate like dust.
A clean table moment forces you to ask:
It’s remarkable how many “must-have” items evaporate when exposed to daylight.
Jobs used the clean-table exercise to cut Apple’s product line from 15 confused devices to four brilliantly focused ones.
Radio needs the same clarity.
A programmer should be able to write the station’s strategy on one page—not a novel.
The clean table pushes you toward:
Everything else is decoration.
When you reset the table, creativity stops being incremental (“tweak this… adjust that… shave 3 seconds off”) and becomes directional.
Instead of patching up old segments, you rediscover:
Talent especially thrives when given a clean foundation instead of a cluttered one.
Most stations don’t fail dramatically—they drift.
A few extra weak testing songs creep into rotation.
A benchmark loses meaning.
The tone gets muddier.
The audience ages without being replaced.
A clean-table evaluation once or twice a year resets the centre of gravity and stops drift.
Jobs used the clean-table method because he hated designing for yesterday.
Radio cannot afford to program for “how things used to be.”
A clean table makes you ask:
This creates stations built forward, not backward.
The Bottom Line
Steve Jobs’ clean-table theory is not minimalism; it’s strategic discipline.
It forces a programmer to strip away clutter, sharpen the story, think boldly and rebuild a station as if launching anew.
Every great radio station benefits from the occasional “wipe it clean” moment.
If Steve Jobs could relaunch the entire computer industry with a clean table a programmer can certainly relaunch a breakfast show.
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