L. RON HUBBARD | BIOGRAPHICAL PROFILE

Hubbard
Colleges

Professionals seeking knowledge and proficiency in all aspects of management enroll in self-paced training programs at Hubbard Colleges of Administration.
Given what Mr. Hubbard’s administrative breakthroughs represent in terms of providing the natural rules by which groups truly function, it was inevitable that his administrative discoveries would become much in demand in general industry and elsewhere. Initially, to meet that demand, Mr. Hubbard authored two books for the working public: How to Live Though an Executive, providing advanced principles for increased efficiency and The Problems of Work, offering techniques for such job-related maladies as stress and exhaustion. Like all else that Mr. Hubbard provided in this field, these works represented not a particular interest in business, but a desire to make the fundamental truths of life known to others—and since work occupies so much of our lives, his efforts in the field were appropriate. As word of what is contained in the greater body of Mr. Hubbard’s administrative works spread, Hubbard Colleges of Administration were then founded.

These institutions specifically utilize L. Ron Hubbard’s discoveries for the expansion of a professional’s ability to tackle the challenges of administering and running a group, company or organization. Colleges stand on five continents and provide training in L. Ron Hubbard’s administrative methods to business men and women from all disciplines: heavy industry, service industry, entertainment, communications, healthcare and every imaginable professional service.

Of particular interest is the use of L. Ron Hubbard’s administrative methods in former communist countries where the privatization of industry necessitated an entirely new organizational philosophy. Russia boasts a Hubbard College of Administration in Moscow and it has seeded L. Ron Hubbard administrative tools across the whole economic infrastructure.

Two of over a dozen Hubbard Colleges of Administration around the world, where more than 175,000 people have learned to apply Mr. Hubbard’s Administrative Technology.
Through the same privatization process, Hungarian administrators likewise turned to L. Ron Hubbard’s organizational policies and so established a Hubbard College in Budapest. Albeit in a very different economic climate, a substantial number of Colombia’s federal employees similarly boast Hubbard College training as do state and county employees of Texas.

Recession, inflation, sagging productivity, debts, strikes, unemployment, poverty and want—these all-too-familiar symptoms of economic decline are actually indicators of a much deeper problem—a crippling lack of administrative know-how. If today’s businesses and governments could competently apply the basic principles of organization and administration, they would enact workable solutions to what has become economic chaos. Such is the role of L. Ron Hubbard’s administrative technology: to provide the means whereby businesses might prosper, governments rule wisely, people may be free of economic duress and, in short, failed dreams may be revived.