Reborn in The Princess Diaries: My Multiverse Empire
Chapter 29 – Three Months Later
The next three months passed faster than Anshul expected.
Instead of focusing on every small step, his life settled into a productive rhythm.
School during the day.
StudyFlow development at night.
And whenever possible, responding to emails from teachers and educators who had discovered the system online.
What started as a simple student project had slowly turned into something much more serious.
StudyFlow was growing.
And the growth was no longer limited to a single country.
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During those three months, several important changes happened.
First, the website traffic increased steadily.
Visitors began arriving not only from India, but also from the United States, Canada, and a few European countries.
Many of them simply downloaded the free version of the software.
But some teachers contacted Anshul directly to ask about the school edition.
The system that allowed assignment tracking, teacher dashboards, and classroom management.
Each new inquiry gave him more insight into what educators needed.
So he continued improving the program.
Better scheduling algorithms.
More stable teacher dashboards.
Simpler installation instructions.
The software became more reliable with every update.
---
By the end of the three-month period, StudyFlow had reached an important milestone.
Five institutions were now using the licensed school edition.
Two tutoring centers.
Three small schools.
All located in the United States.
For Anshul, the number itself wasn't huge.
But the meaning behind it was important.
Five different institutions had trusted software created by a student sitting thousands of kilometers away in India.
And they were paying for it.
---
The website statistics also showed clear progress.
Visitors: 412
Downloads: 134
Active classroom installations: 5 institutions
The numbers were still small compared to large software companies.
But they were growing.
And growth meant momentum.
---
One afternoon at school, Rahul asked the question everyone had been thinking about.
"So how big is StudyFlow now?"
They were sitting in the school courtyard during lunch break.
Anshul opened his notebook and showed the latest statistics.
Rahul whistled.
"Five schools already?"
"Yes."
Rahul leaned back on the bench.
"That's impressive."
Then he added with a grin,
"You're basically running an international software company now."
Anshul shook his head.
"Not yet."
Rahul laughed.
"You always say that."
But deep down, even Anshul understood that the project had moved far beyond its original purpose.
StudyFlow was no longer just a productivity tool.
It was becoming a small but growing business.
---
At home, his father had also started noticing the progress.
One evening during dinner, he asked a simple question.
"So how many schools are using your system now?"
"Five."
His father nodded thoughtfully.
"That's a good sign."
His grandfather looked curious.
"Are they all in India?"
"No," Anshul replied.
"Most are in the United States."
His grandfather laughed softly.
"So our boy is exporting software."
The family seemed quietly proud.
But Anshul remained focused.
Because he knew something important.
This stage was still fragile.
Early growth could disappear quickly if the system failed or the software stopped improving.
So he kept working.
---
Late that night, Anshul sat in front of the computer and reviewed the latest feedback emails.
Several teachers had suggested new features.
Better progress reports.
More detailed assignment tracking.
Support for larger classes.
Each suggestion became a note in his notebook.
Because if StudyFlow continued improving, the system could attract even more institutions.
---
Before shutting down the computer, Anshul opened the statistics page one last time.
Visitors: 426
Downloads: 139
The numbers continued rising slowly.
He closed the browser and wrote a new line in his notebook.
Next Goal: 20 institutions using StudyFlow.
Then he leaned back in his chair.
Three months ago, StudyFlow had only one customer.
Now five institutions were using the system.
If the same momentum continued, the future could grow much larger.
And Anshul intended to keep pushing forward.
