Русская версия

Search document title:
Content search 2 (exact):
ENGLISH DOCS FOR THIS DATE- Ethics Protection (DIV1.DEP3.ETHICS) - P650901-7 | Сравнить
- Mailing List Policies (0.CONDITIONS) - P650901-3 | Сравнить

RUSSIAN DOCS FOR THIS DATE- Защита Этики (ОХС, ЭТИКА) (2) - И650901-7 | Сравнить
- Защита Этики (ОХС, ЭТИКА) (3) - И650901-7 | Сравнить
- Защита Этики (ОХС, ЭТИКА) - И650901-7 | Сравнить
- Инструкции по Членству - И650901-5R78 | Сравнить
- Некоторые Инструкции Технических Отделений - И650901 | Сравнить
- Некоторые Положения Оргполитики, Касающиеся Технического Отделения (КРО-2,4) (ц) - И650901-3 | Сравнить
- Оргполитика в Отношении Списков Адресов (ц) - И650901-3R83 | Сравнить
- Под Защитой Этики (ОХС, ЭТИКА) (ц) - И650901-7 | Сравнить
- Под Защитой Этики (ОХС, ЭТИКА) - И650901-7 | Сравнить
- Юридическая Сторона Зачисления - И650901-4 | Сравнить

SCANS FOR THIS DATE- 650901 - HCO Policy Letter - Current Policy - Franchise [PL009-072]
- 650901 Issue 2 - HCO Policy Letter - Publications [PL009-073]
- 650901 Issue 3 - HCO Policy Letter - Mailing List Policies [PL009-074]
- 650901 Issue 3 - HCO Policy Letter - Mailing List Policies [PL009-075]
- 650901 Issue 4 - HCO Policy Letter - Some Tech Div Policies [PL009-076]
- 650901 Issue 5 - HCO Policy Letter - Membership Policies [PL009-077]
- 650901 Issue 5R - HCO Policy Letter - Mailing List Policies [PL035-042]
- 650901 Issue 6 - HCO Policy Letter - Saint Hill Services and Prices [PL009-078]
- 650901 Issue 7 - HCO Policy Letter - Ethics Protection [PL009-079]
- 650901 Issue 7 - HCO Policy Letter - Ethics Protection [PL050-135]
- 650901 Issue 7 - HCO Policy Letter - Ethics Protection [PL060-037]
- 650901 Issue 7 - HCO Policy Letter - Ethics Protection [PL093-043]
CONTENTS ETHICS PROTECTION Cохранить документ себе Скачать
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
HCO POLICY LETTER OF 1 SEPTEMBER 1965
Issue III
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
HCO POLICY LETTER OF 1 SEPTEMBER AD 15
Issue VII
Gen Non-RemimeoRemimeo

MAILING LIST POLICIES

All Hats
(Preserved policy from former Policy
Letters which have been cancelled)
Div 1
ETHICS

The elementary Emergency formula for a down org is:

ETHICS PROTECTION

1. Promote Promote Promote.

Ethics actions must parallel the purposes of Scientology and its organizations.

2. Then change bad spots and re-organize.

Ethics exists primarily to get technology in. Tech can't work unless Ethics is already in. When tech goes out Ethics can (and is expected to) get it in. For the purpose of Scientology amongst others, is to apply Scientology. Therefore when tech is in, Ethics actions tend to be dropped. Ethics continues its actions until tech is in and as soon as it is, backs off and only acts if tech goes out again.

3. Then economize, cut off all Purchase Orders except postage, communications and rent.

The purpose of the org is to get the show on the road and keep it going. This means production. Every division is a production unit. It makes or does something that can have a statistic to see if it goes up or down. Example: a typist gets out 500 letters in one week. That's a statistic. If the next week the same typist gets out 600 letters that's an UP statistic. If the typist gets out 300 letters that's a DOWN statistic. Every post in an org can have a statistic. So does every portion of the org. The purpose is to keep production (statistics) up. This is the only thing that gives a good income for the staff member personally. When statistics go down or when things are so organized you can't get one for a post, the staff members' pay goes down as the org goes down in its overall production. The production of an organization is only the total of its individual staff members. When these have down statistics so does the org.

4. Get ready to Deliver to the people who will be coming in as a result of the promotion and deliver.

Ethics actions are often used to handle down individual statistics. A person who is not doing his job becomes an Ethics target.

To promote you must have a full mailing list. Anyone who failed to get his mailing list back off old invoices will probably make about thirty or forty thousand pounds less between now and Christmas — which is punishment enough for not following my late '64 orders where the job was skimped.

Conversely, if a person is doing his job (and his statistic will show that) Ethics is considered to be in and the person is protected by Ethics.

I see two orgs that are limping also have a very small mailing list. Any connection?

As an example of the proper application of Ethics to the production of an org, let us say the Letter Registrar has a high statistic (gets out lots of effective mail). Somebody reports the Letter Registrar for rudeness, somebody else reports the Letter Registrar for irregular conduct with a student. Somebody else reports the Letter Registrar for leaving all the lights on. Proper Ethics Officer action = look up the general statistics of the Letter Registrar, and seeing that they average quite high, file the complaints with a yawn.

Rush the project ordered in '64 wherein you culled your addresses back from old invoices and you'll have lots of people and money again. Scientologists never get truly lost.

As the second example of Ethics application to the production of an org, let us say that a Course Supervisor has a low statistic (very few students moved out of his course, course number growing, hardly anyone graduating, a bad Academy statistic). Somebody reports this Course Supervisor for being late for work, somebody else reports him for no weekly Adcomm report and bang! Ethics looks up the person, calls for an Ethics Hearing with trimmings.

Then get onto Book Promotion, put a return self-address card for "more info" in the back of every book you sell and get your list up both from the book sale and the card. Omitted that?

We are not in the business of being good boys and girls. We're in the business of going free and getting the org production roaring. Nothing else is of any interest then to Ethics but (a) getting tech in, getting it run and getting it run right and (b) getting production up and the org roaring along.

Look over the earlier 1965 Policy Letters that define promotion. That's all it is.

Therefore if a staff member is getting production up by having his own statistic

But promotion is successful when you use books to front for you and a flop when you don't. If you think promotion is costly it's because the money isn't invested in getting books sold. Books are your first line of promotion.

excellent. Ethics sure isn't interested. But if a staff member isn't producing, shown by his bad statistic for his post, Ethics is fascinated with his smallest misdemeanor.

Re-organize your book department if it doesn't slam back a book at every orderer within 24 hours of the receipt of the order. Why be poor all the time?

In short a staff member can get away with murder so long as his statistic is up and can't sneeze without a chop if it's down.

1. Place ads

To do otherwise is to permit some suppressive person to simply Ethics chit every producer in the org out of existence.

2. Get mailing lists from anywhere.

When people do start reporting a staff member with a high statistic, what you investigate is the person who turned in the report.

3. Get mailing lists by selling books.

In an ancient army a particularly brave deed was recognized by an award of the title of Kha-Khan. It was not a rank. The person remained what he was, BUT he was entitled to be forgiven the death penalty ten times in case in the future he did anything wrong. That was a Kha-Khan.

4. Sell more books to them.

That's what producing, high statistic staff members are - Kha-Khans. They can get away with murder without a blink from Ethics.

5. Have good processing available for them and say so loudly.

The average fair to poor statistic staff member of course gets just routine ethics with hearings or courts for too many misdeeds. The low statistic fellow gets a court if he sneezes.

6. Have good training available for them and say so loudly.

Ethics must use all org discipline only in view of the production statistic of the staff member involved.

Do just those things and do only those things and you'll be 10 times your size with a lot more pay.

And Ethics must recognize a Kha-Khan when it sees one — and tear up the bad report chits on the person with a yawn.

It's very easy. Why keep doing it the hard way?

To the staff member this means — if you do your job you are protected by Ethics. And if you aren't so protected and your statistic is high, cable me.

I'm interested in review that only those orgs are poor which haven't been following my direct orders. Well, anybody has a right to be poor, I suppose, if he has an appetite for it. Personally I don't care for it. It must be a carefully acquired taste.As a brand new idea in those orgs that are struggling, why not get rich by doing what Ron says?

L. RON HUBBARD

HANDLING NEW ADDRESSES IN CENTRAL ORGS AND OFFICES

LRH:ml.rd

Starting right away, this is the drill for new book buyers. This drill also will be kept in and followed.

1. A person buys a book personally or by mail for the first time.

2. The invoice is made out with the name and address bright and clear on all copies.

3. One copy goes to shipping or books whether mailed or just handed out.

4. One copy goes to own Address. (This is true of all orgs including City Offices. Whatever is done with remaining invoice copies is according to standard accounts procedure.)

5. Address cuts a plate or stencil and puts a date on it and a designation like BB 3/3/65, meaning the person bought a book on 3/3/65.

6. This plate is put in File A and receives whatever goes out to File A for six months.

7. Any new invoice, indeed all invoices, go to Address. If a BB in File A buys more books or training or processing Address obliterates the BB 3/3/65 on the plate or stencil either by just flattening it on a metal plate or cutting a new stencil in case of less durable stencils, and puts it in the regular active files.

8. The Distribution Secretary must not place whole lists in the hands of Field Staff Members but may send prospects to Field Staff Members of proven value to the org.

CITY OFFICES

City Offices must send a copy of the invoice of all memberships it sells or issues free to the Continental Office that issues the Continental Magazine. It must also send a copy of all other invoices for whatever service, including book sales, to the Continental Office, so that these people can get the minor issues of the Continental Magazine, plus any other promotional mailings that go out from the Continental Office. As the City Office has collected the membership money for the memberships that the Continental Office is servicing with magazines, and as the Continental Office does promotion for the City Offices, the senior org draws on the junior org's Book Acct for promotion in the junior org's area.

A City Office must maintain some sort of an Address unit, and Central Files. Until it has funds for buying addressing equipment, it keeps a card file for each name in its Central Files which is anyone who has bought service (includes PE) or bought books, with appropriate abbreviations on the card to match tabbing of a full Central Org Addressograph. Of course, in such a case, when a mailing is to be done by the City Office, then it will be necessary for someone to type duplistickers from this card file — but that is still an address unit functioning. As it can accumulate funds for equipment, it can get an Elliott addressing machine or some other piece of inexpensive equipment for addressing. It is not conceived that an Addressograph would be secured until the City Office had reached full Central Org size. The silk screen Elliott Addressograph is probably cheaper and easier to use than duplistickers even as one can write one as fast as a duplisticker.

The names and addresses of City Offices must be carried in each issue of every magazine mailed by the Continental Office, and other broad promotional pieces.

L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:ml.rd