‘OK, everyone,’ she began. ‘Are we all ready?’
Dominic sighed.
I nodded and smiled. Mandi’s assistant clapped.
Mandi clasped her hands together and grinned. ‘I have fabulous news. Amazing! The best news ever!’
‘You’re leaving,’ Dominic mumbled.
She ignored him, further dramatising with a drum roll to the table.
‘As of this week,’ she continued, ‘we’ve finally done it. We have matchmakers stationed in every continent!’ She pressed a key on her laptop and suddenly pink hearts popped up all over the globe, presumably identifying matchmaker infiltration hotspots.
She looked around the room and began clapping herself. Her assistant joined in.
‘Yay, everyone!’ Mandi said. ‘Well done, us!’
Dominic raised both eyebrows. ‘Every continent?’ he said, leaning back in his chair. ‘We have matchmakers in Antarctica?’
Mandi shook her head, as though she were about to reprimand a troublesome toddler. ‘Antarctica is an iceberg, Dominic, not a continent.’
He rolled his eyes.
‘Besides, it’s melting,’ she said. ‘It’s unwise to expand into an economy with diminishing returns. Didn’t they teach you that at Harvard?’
One of the investors closed his eyes and sank into his chair.
Mandi glided over to the map like an air hostess pointing out the safety exits. ‘Ten here…’ she pointed to France ‘…ten here…’ then Germany ‘…and here…’ then Italy ‘…twelve here…’ Sweden. She reached up and pointed to New York. ‘Twenty matchmakers in New York…’ her finger moved across America ‘…five in LA, seven in San Fransisco…’ then down to Australia ‘… eight in Melbourne, five in Sydney…’ The pointing continued, as did Mandi’s list of countries.
Ten minutes later, when I was feeling somewhat dazed, Mandi leaned forward and tapped on the keypad. Suddenly pink hearts started racing across the wall like some kind of customised disco ball. It felt as though they were throbbing in time to the pulse in my head. ‘One hundred and one matchmakers,’ Mandi concluded with a loud applause.
‘We could make a coat out of them,’ Dominic mumbled.
Mandi glared at him, her applause unfaltering. Her intern joined in.
‘We did it,’ Mandi said. ‘It took ten years, but we did it. This is possibly the most exciting day of my life!’
I grinned at Mandi and high-fived her from across the table.
Dominic shook his head as though struggling to release himself from a disturbing dream. Then he stood up and disconnected Mandi’s laptop as if disarming a nuclear bomb. He replaced it with his laptop and went on to present the previous year’s accounts, taking personal responsibility for everything that was profitable and apportioning blame, mostly to me, for everything that wasn’t. Then he concluded with his strategy for the coming year.
‘Client retention,’ he declared, as though he’d discovered the cure for cancer.
I frowned. One of the investors leaned forward.
Dominic continued. ‘Currently we’re retaining clients for an average of six months. If we could up that to twelve, we’d double our profits.’
The investor who was leaning forward, interrupted. ‘Adjusting for client acquisition costs,’ he said, ‘we’d actually triple our profits.’
‘Exactly,’ said Dominic.
Mandi’s hand shot up.
Dominic ignored it.
Mandi coughed loudly.
I gestured at Mandi to speak.
She turned to Dominic. ‘But our job is to match people. To find them partners. We want them to find love and leave our agency. That’s what they’re paying us for.’
‘Yes,’ Mandi’s assistant chipped in. ‘The clients get upset if they’ve been with us for months without being presented with a life partner.’
Mandi glared at her.
Dominic ignored them both. Then he tapped the keys on his laptop.
He continued. ‘You can see from my projections, if we delay matching our clients by a week or so each time, it will prolong the duration of the service, significantly increasing the revenue from monthly subscriptions.’
He pressed a key and a bar graph was projected onto the wall.
One of the investors made a note on a pad in front of him. Another one checked his mobile.
‘Another significant change I propose,’ Dominic said, leaning back expansively, ‘is with technology.’
All four investors sat up straight. The one with the mobile in his hand quickly put it back in his pocket.
‘Apps,’ Dominic declared, this time as though he’d discovered a renewable energy source. He tapped on his laptop and then another graph appeared, seemingly demonstrating a considerable reduction in costs and an exponential growth in profits.
‘Matchmaking apps.’ He smiled a self-congratulatory smile, while pressing keys on his laptop, which projected an array of charts and screenshots onto the wall. ‘If we convert our service to a digital interface, we’ll cut staffing costs by ninety per cent.’
As Dominic continued babbling on about profit margins and shareholder dividends, I gripped the sides of my chair and starting counting back from a hundred, a technique Dr Phil had explored on a recent episode about anger management. I counted slowly and purposefully, breathing deeply as I did, but at fifty-six, I could no longer stand to listen to Dominic’s attempts to brainwash the investors into agreeing to erode every value that the agency had been founded upon.
I stood up and glared at him. ‘Enough,’ I said.
Dominic stepped back. ‘Excuse me?’
‘You’re excused,’ I said, pushing past him and slamming shut his laptop, bar graph wilting as I did.
Mandi sat forward in her seat. An investor smirked.
Dominic glared back at me. ‘What’s the matter, Eleanor? Are you not concerned about profits?’
‘Of course I am concerned about profits,’ I said. ‘My house is falling down, I’m thirty-six and still wearing Primark shoes. I had more disposable income when I was twenty than I do now. I would love nothing more than a nice fat dividend once in a while. But—’ I turned to the investors ‘—that is not why I am here. That is not why I founded this company.’ I turned back to Dominic. ‘So yes, Dominic, I am concerned about profits. But what I’m more concerned about is our clients.’
Dominic rolled his eyes, as though I was about to suggest we pitch for government-funded matchmaking.
‘This year,’ I continued, ‘we’ve had more divorces than marriages. Did you know that, Dominic?’
He straightened his tie.
‘Last year alone, our clients reported 14,198 failed relationships and 1,239 broken engagements.’
Mandi’s eyes widened.
I continued, ‘Six hundred and seventy-five divorces.’
Mandi gasped.
I leaned forward and connected Mandi’s laptop back to the projector. ‘Mandi’s presentation showed we’re doing a great job. We have contributed to more marriages than any of the online agencies. However, we could do better. We’re helping people find love. But I believe we should extend our service