The Pleasure Boy 34
In operation, Woodruffe's LifeMate Program - the 'WoodLMP program,' as all Woodruffe staff and most outsiders had come to call it - was successful in its central purpose. It surely did make a significant contribution to the company's recruiting and training efforts in staffing up to meet our contract with NASA to design and build robotic colonists for Mars. Early on it had been recognized that an industrial base on the Red Planet, itself capable of manufacturing spacecraft, exploration vehicles and robots, would be key for further exploration of the Solar System and for mining the practically unlimited resources of the Asteroid Belt. But how to build such a base? That's what NASA's Mars project was all about.
Its basic idea had been that instead of sending live human beings, who would require expensive and complicated life-support systems, it would be cheaper and easier to build a Mars colony with intelligent robots. Thanks to all the work on drone aircraft, self-driving cars and artificial general intelligence (AGI), in which Woodruffe Corp. had played a not insignificant role, this was now feasible. What was needed (apart from political will and funding) was to push the technological envelope just a little further. That was where my father and his company came in.
By virtue of its track record and patents in the field of semi-autonomous robotics, Woodruffe Electronics had bid on and won the contract to act as general contractor for the project. It would be responsible for the design and testing of the intelligent devices that would go to work on the red planet. It would subcontract most of the manufacturing and payload delivery to more specialized firms but would gear up to make a few of the most essential units in-house. It would coordinate the efforts of other contractors and subcontractors toward successful completion of the project as a whole. In one crucial aspect of this role, it would perform a quality control function on the deliverables of all the other participating firms, to ensure that their products met specifications and could perform their required functions, separately and together.
To play this role, Woodruffe Corp. had to grow - both in complexity and sheer numbers of employees. Formerly, it had been primarily a design company, which paid its shareholders from the royalties on the numerous patents it held for advanced special-purpose electronic circuitry. Though it could also show considerable experience in manufacturing, quality control and general contracting, it would have to expand these capabilities tremendously to meet the new contract's terms. The prime responsibility for overseeing this expansion - for hiring, managing and coordinating the army of new experts and technicians that would be needed for the NASA contract lay with my Mistress, Judith Arruda, Woodruffe's vice president of human resources and her department, in which I now played a part as the designer and effective coordinator of Woodruffe Corporation's LifeMate Program, though Alan Arnold one Judith's senior employees was its nominal manager. Alan and I worked well together. An experienced recruitment officer, he had been my main tutor in Human Resource Management (HRM) when I first came aboard to serve Judith, and was well suited to handle the over-all administration of our WoodLuMP program while I looked after the matching, contracting and mentoring of individual applicants and couples. He was nominally my boss, placed between Judith Arruda and myself on the company's org chart. But I knew Judith's concerns and had her ear more intimately than he did, so that effectively we were equals in the WoodLuMP unit, with no other choice but to get along.
Of course, the Woodruffe LifeMate Program was just a very small part of the happenings at Woodruffe Electronics as that entity grew and transformed itself to play its role in NASA's Mars Project. But, as time passed, by all parameters that could be measured, it was judged to be making a modest but significant contribution to the company's recruiting and training efforts, and to its morale. Applications for employment increased by 18% over what they had been before; stress-related sick days fell by 7%; trainees scored 12% higher on tests of skill and knowledge after a year of training than they had done previously; staff turnover, which had been low before, decreased still further. Project milestones were achieved (on average) 6% faster than before. Woodruffe's reputation as a leader in its field rose still further; and its LifeMate Program came to be emulated by most of Woodruffe's direct competitors, and also by various other companies with Woodruffe's core need to attract, train and retain highly skilled personnel.
Unfortunately, there was no objective way to separate WoodLuMP's contribution to these benefits from the contributions of various other iniΒtiatives and policies. We had to make do with anecdotal evidence to judge the business benefits of lifemate relationships and of our program to encourage them. Our unit kept track of Woodruffe company's registered lifemate relationships, and wrote up this evidence systematically. For my account here, a few examples will suffice.
β’ Probably the most typical case was that of the recent graduate who sought to jump start his career by apprenticing him- or herself to a master in that same professional field. The typical challenge for us in such cases was that only a few of these youngsters were natural submissives, while only a few of their potential masters were natural Dominants. Our problem then was to show and convince both types that some casual version of the D/s mindset and protocol could be of use to them in getting along and working well together. One splendid example for our cause was a young man named Tony Smith with a new PhD in the field of Artificial Intelligence who happened to be gay. He knew of a middle-aged luminary in his specialty, one Samuel Wilson, whom he knew was also homosexual, and currently unattached. Learning of our program, he applied for employment with us, asking us to approach Dr. Wilson on his behalf. Boldly he had already introduced himself to Wilson, and had a shrewd idea of what would happen when we did. Wilson worked for one our competitors at the time, but with the intrinsic fascination of the Mars Program and a decent pay increase (augmented too by half the entry-level salary of Mr. Smith), he was readily persuaded to join us. Their recruitment as a couple was a spectacular example of the effect we'd hoped for, and it was not unusual. It was repeated often, and justified our program many times over.
β’ Another success story, unique from one perspective but typical in its way was the case of the seeing-eye person, taken aboard as a lifemate for Larry Gruber, a blind network engineer, 47 years old, who had become outstandingly good at visualizing the conectivities of complex electronic networks. He loved his job but was finding both the commute and his daily life increasingly tiring. Having saved enough over the years to buy himself a small but adequate annuity, he was thinking to retire. Learning of our program, he approached us, asking us to help him find and hire a young woman who would serve him as a combination housekeeper, bedfellow and seeing-eye dog. Through Myrna Stiles and LifeMates Inc. we advertised and found a bright, sweet high-school dropout who made a fine life for herself by attaching herself to Gruber and helping him navigate his world. At work, seated almost full-time in his familiar cubicle, he didn't need her, so paid for her training as a typist and filing clerk and got us to hire her (rather than someone else) as soon as we had an opening. In this way, we got at least another eighteen years of fine work out him and as many years of competent secretarial work out of her. He got a devoted much-more-than-wife and the portion of her salary that paid for her room-and-board. She got a career that was well beyond her expectations as a school dropout, along with a kind and grateful husband who took her everywhere he went and gave her a much richer life than she would otherwise have had. It was a win-win all around.