About L. Ron Hubbard
L. Ron Hubbard is perhaps best known as an author and as the Founder of the Scientology religion. His works are published in 52 languages with hundreds of millions of copies in print. Yet he is also remembered by millions as a great humanitarian who, after more than half a century of research into methods to better the human condition, left a legacy that improves lives in innumerable ways. This legacy is recorded in an immense body of work that literally comprises tens of millions of words.
Born in Tilden, Nebraska, on March 13, 1911, Mr. Hubbard spent his early years in what was then still the frontier territory of Montana. Possessed of a rare curiosity, one that motivated his ethnological examinations of 21 races and cultures and encouraged him while still in his teens to trek across a then-remote China that few Westerners would ever see, he logged more than a quarter of a million miles by the time he reached the age of 19 without the benefit of commercial air transportation.
By the time he enrolled in George Washington University in 1930 to study engineering, it was obvious that he had already embarked upon his life’s work: a search for solutions to man’s most perplexing problems, and the creation of workable technologies to improve all facets of life.
While the full array of his accomplishments in these early years could fill a book, there are some particularly fitting to mention here.
Likewise in 1950, realizing that what passed for administration at the time was inconsistent and arbitrary, Mr. Hubbard turned his attention to that area. His first book on the subject, How to Live Though an Executive, published in 1953, recognized that the true role of an executive in any organization was to plan and supervise, and detailed a communication system for any office or organization. Indeed, the book was a communication manual appropriate for any organization of any size. Three years later, his book The Problems of Work isolated the problems encountered on the job by everyone, from worker to chief executive officer, and presented methods anyone could use to regain his or her enthusiasm for work.
In 1965, after years of continued research into the forms and functions of organization, Mr. Hubbard announced his development of the Seven-Division Organizing Board, a major breakthrough that presented the most successful administrative pattern of operation for any group of any size. These seven divisions, which are further divided into departments, encompass all the actions that are performed – or should be performed – in any organization. Indeed, this organizational breakthrough when applied, ensures the continued success and stable expansion of any organization.
Man’s happiness and the longevity of companies and states apparently depend upon organizational know-how.
L. Ron Hubbard
External Links: L. Ron Hubbard — Recognitions