Reborn in The Princess Diaries: My Multiverse Empire
Chapter 32 – Building Stability
By the time StudyFlow reached ten institutions, Anshul realized something important.
Growth was exciting.
But growth also brought responsibility.
Until recently, the system had been small enough that problems could be fixed quickly. If a bug appeared, Anshul could correct it overnight and send an updated version the next day.
But with more schools using the system, even a small error could affect dozens of students and teachers.
That meant one thing.
The software had to become more stable than ever before.
---
Over the next several weeks, Anshul changed his development strategy.
Instead of constantly adding new features, he focused on improving the core system.
The scheduling algorithm was rewritten to handle larger numbers of assignments without conflicts.
The teacher dashboard was simplified so instructors could navigate it easily.
He also redesigned the reporting system, allowing teachers to see student progress across an entire class in a single view.
These improvements didn't create excitement like new features.
But they made the system stronger.
And strong systems lasted longer.
---
Meanwhile, StudyFlow continued spreading slowly across different regions.
Teachers often shared tools with each other through education forums, and the program began appearing in more discussions online.
Each time a teacher recommended StudyFlow, a few new visitors appeared on the website.
The numbers grew steadily.
One evening, after connecting to the internet, Anshul checked the statistics again.
Visitors: 903
Downloads: 321
Licensed institutions: 12
Two more schools had joined during the previous month.
One from the United States.
Another from Canada.
The momentum was continuing.
---
At school, Rahul noticed that Anshul had become even more disciplined.
"You're working every night again?" Rahul asked during lunch break.
"Yes."
Rahul leaned back in his chair.
"Doesn't it get tiring?"
"Sometimes."
Rahul grinned.
"So why keep pushing?"
Anshul thought about the question for a moment.
Then he answered simply.
"Because the system is growing."
Rahul nodded slowly.
"That makes sense."
Then he added jokingly,
"Just don't forget us when you become a big software tycoon."
Anshul laughed.
"That's not happening anytime soon."
But even he knew that the project was evolving faster than expected.
---
At home, his father continued observing the progress quietly.
One evening he asked,
"How many schools are using your system now?"
"Twelve."
His father nodded thoughtfully.
"That's steady growth."
Then he added,
"The early stage of a company is always the hardest."
Anshul looked at him curiously.
"You think this could become a company?"
His father smiled faintly.
"If it continues expanding like this, why not?"
The idea lingered in Anshul's mind long after the conversation ended.
---
Later that night, Anshul opened his notebook again.
The page that once contained only a few simple goals had become much longer.
User statistics.
Feature ideas.
Expansion plans.
At the bottom of the page, he wrote a new objective.
Next milestone: 25 institutions and 1000 downloads.
The numbers looked ambitious.
But they were not impossible.
Because every month the system was growing a little more.
And if the same momentum continued…
StudyFlow could eventually reach far beyond what he had imagined when he first wrote the program.
Anshul closed the notebook and turned off the computer.
Another day of progress had ended.
And tomorrow, the work would continue.
