It all started with a spreadsheet.

We've all been there. The mid-summer panic. The final-year internship hunt. You're applying to dozens, maybe hundreds, of jobs. The applications blur into a chaotic mess of bookmarks, sent emails, and broken links. And what's the one tool everyone turns to?

Our Story.

It was the summer before our final year of university. My girlfriend (a CompSci major) and I (an IT major) were deep in the grad role hunt.

One day, she shared an Excel file with me. "Look," she said, "I made a spreadsheet to track our applications!"

I stared at the grid. It felt... lifeless. A data graveyard. It was a chore to update and a pain to look at. It didn't tell me if I was getting better, which resumes were working, or how many rejections I'd collected. It was just... data. This wasn't a tool; it was a burden.

“There Had to Be a Better Way.”

I went online, convinced a better tool existed.

I was wrong.

All I found were generic trackers that felt just like spreadsheets, only uglier. Nothing was dedicated to the job applicant. Nothing was insightful.

I saw the gap. What about the thousands of other students applying to 1,000+ jobs? What about the people feeling helpless, bound to a tool from the 90s to manage a 21st-century problem?

The "Blank Out."

We all know the feeling. You get a spontaneous call for an interview. You panic. "Which job was this? When did I apply? What resume did I even use? What was the job description?" You're totally lost.

The Flow State.

StatusFlow was built to solve this. It's not just a tracker. It's an archive.

It provides real insights on your application performance.
It saves the exact resume you used for that specific job.
It saves a snapshot of the job description before the listing disappears.

It's designed to turn that moment of panic into a moment of perfect preparation.

Built for Applicants, By an Applicant.

StatusFlow isn't built by a giant, faceless corporation. It's built by someone who just went through the exact same struggle you're in. It's the tool I wish I had.

Stop tracking. Start analyzing.