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ENGLISH DOCS FOR THIS DATE- Danger Conditions - Inspections by Executive Secretaries, How to do Them (0.CONDITIONS) - P660201-2 | Сравнить
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CONTENTS DANGER CONDITIONS INSPECTIONS BY EXECUTIVE SECRETARIES, HOW TO DO THEM Cохранить документ себе Скачать
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
HCO POLICY LETTER OF 1 FEBRUARY 1966
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
HCO POLICY LETTER OF 1 FEBRUARY 1966
Issue IV
Gen Non-RemimeoRemimeo
Exec Sec Hats

STATISTICS, ACTIONS TO TAKE
STATISTIC CHANGES

LRH Comm Hat

When statistics change radically for better or for worse look for the last major alteration or broad general action just before it and it is usually the reason.

Issue II

Example: Letter out statistic falls and falls. In investigating look for the last major change in that area and if possible cancel it and the statistic will then rise. Let us say that just at the top of the down drop, the 3rd week in November, the Dept of Registration was given new dictation equipment. Take it away and restore the old arrangement and routing pattern that was in use with it and sit back and see what happens. The statistic will probably recover.

Exec Div

Example: The Field Staff Member Commission statistic has been very low and suddenly leaps to affluence. You want to reinforce it so you study what happened just before it. As it takes a bit of time on a statistic that has longer comm lines, you look a bit earlier. You find the Dir Clearing began to send FSMs big info packets they could give people. So you okay lots of such info packets to be given out and the affluence of the statistic continues. And you write LRH what made it do that so a Pol Ltr can be written.

DANGER CONDITIONS INSPECTIONS BY EXECUTIVE SECRETARIES, HOW TO DO THEM

I learned this while researching the life force of plants. Everytime I saw a research bed of plants worsen, I queried what routine had been varied and found invariably some big change had been made that wasn't usual.

An Executive Secretary who does not get around his or her divisions now and then and see what is going on can make a lot of mistakes.

It is change that changes things for better or for worse. That's the simplicity of the natural law.

Inspections are desirable. But when an Executive Secretary makes one he or she commonly issues an order or two, and if this is done without that division's secretary being present it is a by-pass and willy-nilly begins the formula of the Danger Condition and can unmock a section or department or even that Division.

If you want to hold a constant condition, don't change anything.

A senior can inspect, chat, advise, but must never issue an order on a by-pass unless he or she means to handle a dangerous situation and start the formula. For the formula will run, regardless, if a by-pass begins.

If you are trying to improve something make changes cautiously and keep a record of what is changed (like all orders must be by SEC EDs). Then you watch statistics and if they decline you hastily wipe out the last change. And if they improve you reinforce the change that began it.

The way to inspect, then, is to collect the seniors and go around, and issue orders only to the next senior on the command channel, never to his or her staff.

For instance we know the 7 Division System pattern works for the better it's gotten in in an org the more its graphs go up.

Example: HCO Exec Sec wants to see if books are stored safely. The HCO Exec Sec can nip out and look on his or her lonesome providing no orders are issued. Or the HCO Exec Sec grabs the Dissem Sec and the Dir Pubs and the head of the books section and goes out and looks. And if the HCO Exec Sec wants a change in it all, the order is issued to the Dissem Sec only.

The Org Board of summer 1964 also works for a small org because it started their statistics up. But it was not good enough to maintain height of statistic when a certain size was reached. So we got the 7 Division pattern of 1965.

It is a great temptation to tell Books-in-Charge how and where to put what, for an HCO Exec Sec is one normally because he or she is smarter and more knowledgeable about orgs. But if one is to advise Books-in-Charge, one had better have the rest of the command chain right there and talk to the next senior below HCO Exec Sec.

It is of course obvious that if Joe as Org Sec did okay and if replaced with Bill who is only 15 the Org Division will falter.

You would be surprised how many random currents a senior type senior like an Exec Sec can set up with a few comments that skip the command channels and what a mess it can make for a Secretary or Director, no matter how wise the comments.

But frankly it is not just a personnel question by far.

Secretaries who order a Director's officers in the absence of the Director or, much worse, section staff without Director or Section Officer thereby court and make trouble.

Personnel equates against case gain more than personality. In December 1965 at Saint Hill, the gross divisional statistics very closely matched the case progress of the Secretaries of each division. You can almost assign a post by:

You can unmock a section or a whole department by sloppy command lines. It is not merely the "correct" thing. It's the vital thing to follow command channels as nobody can hold his job if he is being by-passed by a senior. He feels unmocked, and the Danger Condition formula begins to unroll.

  • 1. Grade of Release, and

The correct way to route an order to a person two or three steps down the command channel is to tell the next one below you to order the next, and so on.

  • 2. Leadership Survey, plus
  • If you have to tell the Director of Tech Services to have his Housing Officer post a list of houses on the bulletin board, you really don't have a Director of Tech Services anyway as he would have done it as the natural thing. So an order in such an obvious case is not the right comm. The right comm is an Ethics chit on the Dir of Tech Services for not posting the available houses on the bulletin board.

  • 3. Experience in org.
  • A smart senior is a senior because he is smarter. But when this is not true and the junior is smarter, you get an intolerable situation where the senior interferes. If a dull senior interferes continually on a by-pass, it's a sure way to start a mutiny. And a senior who doesn't inspect or get inspections done does not know and so looks dull to his juniors who have looked.

    Those 3 factors take into no account personality or aptitude much contrary to all the tests the 19th Century psychologist or 18th Century phrenologist would have made and used.

    The safe way in all cases is to issue orders that are very standard on-policy and obvious and to issue them to the next one on the command channel and then in the future inspect or get an inspection. If on the inspection one finds non-compliance with a standard on-policy order, one promptly calls for a hearing on the next one down the line who received the order.

    So while personnel changes are always a possible reason for radical shifts in statistics, they are by no means the major ones.

    Here's a terribly simple example: Org Exec Sec sees statistic for Tech Div down. Issues order to Tech Sec. "Get the gross divisional statistic up at once." Now nothing could be plainer or more standard. In two weeks the Org Exec Sec looks at the statistic, sees it is even further down and calls for a hearing on the Tech Sec for non-compliance or a Comm Ev to get all the evidence in about the matter.

    Shifts of comm lines, functions, policies, equipment, duties, locations are quite often far more responsible for graph shifts.

    This is about as basic as you can get with an inspection, an order and a further action all by a senior, the inspection being done by OIC and reported by graph.

    Personnel comes into it this way: When you make a bad rearrangement and you have an incompetent personnel also you have disaster!

    Life in actual fact is very simple and an org is today a very elementary mechanism.

    If you make a bad rearrangement and the personnel are good the statistic drop may be only a small one as they cope. So even small drops should be investigated, particularly around good personnel.

    It is easy to run an organization providing one makes it run and handles things in it that refuse to run.

    The morals are these: If you have a disaster (big Danger Condition) find the big change which preceded it or the missed order and get that fixed and also shift personnel.

    Where an Exec Sec is baffled on occasion is the apparent unwillingness of a section to function. Now this is so far down the command channel that info on it does not easily arrive back at the top.

    If you see a person who has a good record coping like mad, inspect the area of that post to find what needs fixing up, what changes were made that overpressured that post and get it right.

    The thing to do where possible is personally inspect. Or get it inspected. One often finds the silliest things.

    THE PAUSED STATISTIC

    Example: Book Shipping statistic is really down, man, down. One orders and harangues and argues trying to get books shipped. One gets the quantity of books looked into. it's okay. One gets shipping materials looked into. They're okay. A Shipping clerk is on the Org Board. But orders to the Dissem Sec just never get books shipped. So finally one gathers up the Dissem Sec. Dir Pubs and Books-in-Charge and goes down to Book Shipping–Lo! They have been building a machine that wraps books tightly when a rock is rolled off a bench! (This actually happened in DC in about 1958.) It has taken a month to build it and will require another to finish it and one and all in that Division are convinced this is the answer. The order? "Break that machine up and start wrapping books by hand and I want that backlog gone in one week." To the Dissem Sec. of course, in front of everyone for his soul's sake. And publish the order in writing as soon as possible.

    During expansion, one has areas where statistics become level.

    So you see, you have to inspect because what seems logical and okay to juniors may be completely silly. Remember, that is why they are juniors and have seniors.

    Here statistics pause because lines jam. People get overworked and confused.

    Frankly you can never guess at what holds some things up. You have to look. Often you can solve it for them. But solve it with their agreement and on command channel if you want it done.

    The traffic is just too heavy.

    You can't always sit in an ivory tower and issue orders. You have to know the ground and the business.

    And where do you really repair in such a case? More clerks? No! Always look to the lines of the highest post in the overloaded area and get them eased.

    Over a period of fifteen years of active management of these organizations I have a pretty good idea of what can happen in one. And to one.

    In expansion the person who never notices is the man in charge. And his lines are the most crippling to the org if jammed.

    I try to be right more often than wrong. I don't try to be perfect as one's best plans are often goofed. I try to get done what can be gotten done. And I carry a little more pressure on the org that it can really accomplish.

    Example: Org Sec and Org Division stacked up and coping frantically. Org Exec Sec wonders what to do. Their statistics are paused (in a level line). They are overworked. Hire more clerks? No. Sort out the Org Sec and be sure more help is furnished on that post. Then the Org Sec (with a personal Secretary to sort her mail, etc.) looks up and starts sorting out the Division.

    I inspect. You would be surprised at how often I do and what I find out.

    The old trick I used to use was to tell an overworked director "Draw me up a list of all the hats you are wearing". And he or she would finally bring one in, round-eyed. "35 hats!" I recall one saying.

    It sometimes looks to people that I use a crystal ball in taking the actions I take because they see no possible route by which the data could have reached me.

    I would take the one nearest the director in duties and fill it with a staff member and the department would ease off.

    They forget how many lines I keep in operation. And also, I do operate on a "sixth sense".

    Somebody like the Div 7 Sec or the LRH Communicator can do this to Exec Secs. If they are slaving, make them put on somebody to unjam their lines. They'll straighten the rest out.

    For instance all accounting summaries today are done for governments, not for management. A manager has to develop a sixth sense concerning financial status of the org. One has to be able to know when the bills are up, the income inadequate and to know when to promote hard and stall creditors even with no data from accounts or contrary data that proved false.

    So a paused statistic comes from the jammed lines of the topmost executives and is best remedied by easing them.

    Today with OIC this is easy. But I ran orgs successfully with no OIC for years just by sensing the financial situation. In theory accounts keeps one fully posted. In actual fact they often goof in filing bills owed and even in depositing money.

    _________________

    There are many things one can sense, OIC or no OIC.

    An org today is not run on personalities. It's run on statistics. All orders are based on statistics. The old personality system used by the business world and military is as yesterday as the rack and almost as cruel. Go modern. Use statistics only.

    The thing to do is to inspect or to get the area you sense is wrong inspected.

    L. RON HUBBARD

    I have today LRH Communicators. They are pushing projects home. They also can tell me why projects won't push home because they have looked.

    LRH:ml.rd

    An Exec Sec or a Secretary has HCO's Inspection and Reports and a Time Machine to check compliance. And this is how it should be.

    But nothing will substitute for inspection by one or for one.

    And the Exec Sec who thinks it's a desk job is being very naive. The org would run better if Exec Secs had no in baskets.

    If an Exec Sec watched statistics like a hungry cat at a mousehole and inspected like fury every time one went down or stayed down, the org would expand and prosper.

    Providing Inspection was done.

    L. RON HUBBARD
    LRH:ml.rd