      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE

Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex



       HCO BULLETIN OF 23 MAY 1971R

                 Issue V

         REVISED 29 NOVEMBER 1974



Remimeo

Auditors

Supervisors

Tech/Qual

Students



        Basic Auditing Series 5R



   THE COMMUNICATION CYCLE IN AUDITING



      (From the LRH tape 6 Feb. 64,

  "The Communication Cycle in Auditing")





The ease with which you can handle a communication cycle depends 

on your ability to observe what the pc is doing.



We have to add to the simplicity of the communication cycle 

OBNOSIS (observation of the obvious).



Your inspection of what you are doing should have ended with 

your training. Thereafter it should be taken up exclusively with 

the observation of what the pc is doing or is not doing.



Your handling of a communication cycle ought to be so instinctive 

and so good that you're never worried about what you do now.



The time for you to get all this fixed up is in training. If you 

know your communication cycle is good, you haven't any longer got 

to be upset about whether you're doing it right or not. You know 

yours is good, so you don't worry about it any more.



In actual auditing, the communication cycle that you watch is the 

pc's. Your business is the communication cycle and responses of 

the pc.



This is what makes the auditor who can crack any case, and when 

absent, you have an auditor who couldn't crack an egg if he 

stepped on it.



This is the difference. It's whether or not this auditor can 

observe the communication cycle of the pc and repair its various 

lapses.



It's so simple.



It simply consists of asking a question that the pc can answer, 

and then observing that the pc answers it, and when the pc has 

answered it, observing that the pc has completed the answer to it 

and is through answering it. Then give him the acknowledgment. 

Then give him something else to do. You can ask the same question 

or you can ask another question.



Asking the pc a question he can answer involves clearing the 

auditing command. You also ask it of the pc so that the pc can 

hear it and knows what he's being asked.



When the pc answers the question, be bright enough to know that 

the pc is answering that question and not some other question.



You have to develop a sensitivity -- when did the pc finish 

answering what you've asked? You can tell when the pc has 

finished. It's a piece of knowingness. He looks like he's finished 

and he feels like he's finished. It's part sense; it's part his 

vocal intonation; but it's an instinct that you develop. You know 

he's finished.



Then knowing he's finished answering, you tell him he's finished 

with an acknowledgment -- "Okay," "Good," etc. It's like pointing 

out the bypassed charge to the pc. Like, "You have now found and 

located the bypassed charge in answer to the question and you have 

said it." That's the magic of acknowledgment.



If you don't have that sensitivity for when the pc is finished 

answering, he answers, gets nothing from you, you sit there and 

look at him, his social machinery goes into action, he gets onto 

self-auditing and you get no TA action.



The degree of stop you put on your acknowledgment is also your 

good sense because you can acknowledge a pc so hard that you 

finish the session right there.



It's all very well to do this sort of thing in training and it's 

forgivable, but NOT in an auditing session.



Get your own communication cycle sufficiently well repaired that 

you don't have to worry about it after training.





L. RON HUBBARD

Founder



LRH:nt.rd.jh.gm



