Building the First Industrial Empire in Another World
Chapter 15: The Improvements
- Chapter 81: The Preliminary Data
- Chapter 80: The Three Businessmen Part 2
- Chapter 79: The Three Businessmen Part 1
- Chapter 78: The First Customer
- Chapter 77: Birth of Helmarte Machine Works
- Chapter 76: The Machine Shop
- Chapter 75: The Profit Rolling In
- Chapter 74: Using Fifty Horsepower
- Chapter 73: Eight Times More Power
- Chapter 72: The First Steam-Powered Factory
- Chapter 71: What to do With It
- Chapter 70: The 50 HP Steam Engine
- Chapter 69: The Progress of the Three Branches
- Chapter 68: Completion of the Three Branches
- Chapter 67: Development in Months
- Chapter 66: Signing Contracts
- Chapter 65: Birth of a New Industry
- Chapter 64: The Steam Engine
- Chapter 63: The Boring Machine
- Chapter 62: Mobilization of Workers
- Chapter 61: Prelude to Industrialization
- Chapter 60: Thinking About That Specific Machine
- Chapter 59: Papers
- Chapter 58: In Favor of Olive Oil
- Chapter 57: Olive Oil
- Chapter 56: Another Problem
- Chapter 55: A Slight Inconvenience to the Production
- Chapter 54: How to Protect a Business
- Chapter 53: The Numbers
- Chapter 52: The First Morning at the Estate
- Chapter 51: Late Night Thoughts
- Chapter 50: Dinner
- Chapter 49: The Engineering Mind Racing
- Chapter 48: Thinking of the Future
- Chapter 47: Staffs Acquired
- Chapter 46: The Turnover
- Chapter 45: The Potential of the Three Cities
- Chapter 44: Choosing the Three Cities
- Chapter 43: Investment Secured
- Chapter 42: We’ll Talk About It
- Chapter 41: Confrontation and Investments
- Chapter 40: Competitor?
- Chapter 39: The Performance of the Soap Factory
- Chapter 38: All Set!
- Chapter 37: At the Realty
- Chapter 36: Looking to Increase Life Quality
- Chapter 35: Helmarte Soap Works Now Open for Business
- Chapter 34: The Production Process
- Chapter 33: The Opening of the Plant
- Chapter 32: Finished Construction
- Chapter 31: During the Construction
- Chapter 30: The Construction of the Soap Manufacturing Plant
- Chapter 29: The Important Day
- Chapter 28: Meeting the Merchant Guildmaster
- Chapter 27: Heading to the Merchant Guild
- Chapter 26: It’s Settled!
- Chapter 25: Business Plan
- Chapter 24: Sponsorship
- Chapter 23: The Terms
- Chapter 22: Business Proposal
- Chapter 21: Product Demonstration
- Chapter 20: Making a lot of Soap
- Chapter 19: Mother’s Here
- Chapter 18: Making Soap
- Chapter 17: Buying Ingredients for Soap
- Chapter 16: A Month Later
- Chapter 15: The Improvements
- Chapter 14: The Leaks
- Chapter 13: Implementing Basic Reforms
- Chapter 12: Contract Signing
- Chapter 11: Returning Home
- Chapter 10: The Job’s Done
- Chapter 9: Agreement
- Chapter 8: Proving Oneself
- Chapter 7: The Arduous Work
- Chapter 6: First Day of Work
- Chapter 5: The Dinner
- Chapter 4: Realizations
- Chapter 3: Value of Money and Determination
- Chapter 2: The Medieval World
- Chapter 1: Reincarnation
The changes inside Hollen’s forge did not happen overnight.
At first, most workers downstairs barely even noticed what Ernest was doing upstairs.
To them, he was simply Victor’s strange son who somehow escaped furnace duty and started carrying parchments instead of coal.
But by the end of the first week, the effects slowly started becoming visible.
The first thing Ernest focused on was organization. The forge previously handled records like people stuffing random tools into a single chest and hoping they could find them later.
Merchant requests were constantly delayed because paperwork disappeared beneath unrelated documents.
Workers often waited for instructions because nobody knew which orders had priority.
Even Hollen himself wasted time searching through ledgers.
So Ernest changed that first.
He divided the shelves into categories.
Merchant orders.
Inventory records.
Completed payments.
Pending payments.
Coal deliveries.
Iron shipments.
Finished contracts.
At first, Hollen thought the system looked unnecessary.
Then one morning, a merchant arrived asking about a delayed farming tool shipment.
Normally, Hollen would spend several minutes digging through random parchments while getting increasingly irritated.
This time, Ernest immediately walked toward the shelf, grabbed the correct record, and handed it over within seconds.
The merchant looked surprised.
Hollen looked even more surprised.
That alone already changed workflow speed upstairs.
The second improvement involved inventory tracking.
Before Ernest arrived, workers simply grabbed materials whenever they needed them.
Nobody accurately tracked how much iron or coal actually remained.
As a result, shortages constantly happened unexpectedly.
And whenever shortages happened, Hollen panic-bought materials from nearby suppliers at inflated prices.
Ernest introduced standardized inventory sheets.
Every incoming material got recorded.
Every outgoing material got recorded too.
Then at the end of each workday, remaining stock got physically verified.
At first, the workers downstairs hated it.
One blacksmith even grumbled openly.
"So now we count coal like merchants count coins?"
Ernest simply replied calmly.
"If we don’t count materials, then we don’t know where money disappears."
That statement spread surprisingly fast inside the forge.
By the second week, the improvements became harder to ignore.
For the first time in years, the forge stopped running out of coal unexpectedly. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎
That alone stabilized production.
Before, furnaces occasionally slowed down because workers waited for delayed fuel deliveries.
Now, Ernest started forecasting consumption rates.
He reviewed how much coal each furnace consumed daily and compared it against incoming deliveries.
Once stock levels reached a certain point, new orders were arranged before shortages happened.
To explain it to Hollen simply, Ernest used an analogy.
"Right now, your old system was like waiting until your stomach was empty before planting crops."
That explanation immediately clicked inside the forge owner’s head.
Planning ahead reduced desperation.
And desperation was expensive.
Another thing Ernest introduced was production tracking.
Before, nobody truly knew how productive each workstation was.
Workers forged tools endlessly without measurable output targets.
So Ernest created daily production sheets.
Worker Team.
Product Type.
Quantity Produced.
Materials Used.
Simple.
But powerful.
After several days, patterns immediately appeared.
One furnace team consistently produced more horseshoes than another despite using nearly identical material quantities.
At first, Hollen assumed the second team was simply lazy.
But Ernest investigated further.
The issue turned out to be workflow positioning.
The slower team constantly walked farther to retrieve tools and water buckets.
Small inefficiencies.
But repeated dozens of times daily.
Back on Earth, modern factories optimized floor layouts carefully for exactly this reason.
Even seconds mattered at scale.
So Ernest reorganized several workstations downstairs.
Coal storage moved closer to the furnaces.
Frequently used tools got grouped near specific stations.
Water buckets became assigned per workstation instead of shared randomly.
To the workers, the changes initially felt minor.
But after several days, production speed noticeably increased.
Less walking.
Less waiting.
Less shouting for missing tools.
The forge slowly started feeling less chaotic.
By the third week, Hollen’s attitude toward Ernest changed completely.
At first, the owner treated him like an unusually useful child.
Now?
Hollen started actively asking for his opinion before making purchasing decisions.
One afternoon, the owner entered the office carrying two supplier contracts.
"Which one should I take?" he asked.
That alone honestly said a lot.
Three weeks earlier, Hollen barely trusted Ernest enough to organize parchments.
Now the forge owner consulted him on business decisions.
Ernest reviewed both supplier offers carefully.
One supplier offered cheaper coal but inconsistent delivery schedules.
The other charged slightly more but guaranteed stable shipments.
Most people here would simply choose the cheaper option immediately.
But Ernest calculated differently.
Delayed deliveries created furnace downtime.
Downtime slowed production.
Slower production delayed merchant contracts.
Delayed contracts delayed payments.
So technically, unreliable cheap coal could become more expensive long term.
He explained it simply to Hollen.
"A broken wheel costs more than a strong wheel if the wagon stops moving."
Hollen stared at him quietly for several seconds after hearing that.
Then chose the reliable supplier.
By the fourth week, even the workers downstairs started noticing the changes.
The forge operated smoother now.
Materials arrived more consistently.
Orders got completed faster.
Merchant complaints reduced.
Workers no longer spent half the morning searching for missing tools or waiting for instructions.
Even payment processing improved because Ernest started organizing wage records properly.
Before, labor payments depended heavily on rough memory and scattered notes.
Now, each worker’s attendance and workload got recorded clearly.
That reduced disputes immediately.
One worker tried claiming extra wages for days he never worked.
Ernest quietly checked the records and disproved it within seconds.
After that incident, workers slowly stopped questioning the new systems upstairs.
Because for the first time, the forge no longer felt like a giant machine barely holding itself together.
It finally started functioning like an actual business.
- Chapter 81: The Preliminary Data
- Chapter 80: The Three Businessmen Part 2
- Chapter 79: The Three Businessmen Part 1
- Chapter 78: The First Customer
- Chapter 77: Birth of Helmarte Machine Works
- Chapter 76: The Machine Shop
- Chapter 75: The Profit Rolling In
- Chapter 74: Using Fifty Horsepower
- Chapter 73: Eight Times More Power
- Chapter 72: The First Steam-Powered Factory
- Chapter 71: What to do With It
- Chapter 70: The 50 HP Steam Engine
- Chapter 69: The Progress of the Three Branches
- Chapter 68: Completion of the Three Branches
- Chapter 67: Development in Months
- Chapter 66: Signing Contracts
- Chapter 65: Birth of a New Industry
- Chapter 64: The Steam Engine
- Chapter 63: The Boring Machine
- Chapter 62: Mobilization of Workers
- Chapter 61: Prelude to Industrialization
- Chapter 60: Thinking About That Specific Machine
- Chapter 59: Papers
- Chapter 58: In Favor of Olive Oil
- Chapter 57: Olive Oil
- Chapter 56: Another Problem
- Chapter 55: A Slight Inconvenience to the Production
- Chapter 54: How to Protect a Business
- Chapter 53: The Numbers
- Chapter 52: The First Morning at the Estate
- Chapter 51: Late Night Thoughts
- Chapter 50: Dinner
- Chapter 49: The Engineering Mind Racing
- Chapter 48: Thinking of the Future
- Chapter 47: Staffs Acquired
- Chapter 46: The Turnover
- Chapter 45: The Potential of the Three Cities
- Chapter 44: Choosing the Three Cities
- Chapter 43: Investment Secured
- Chapter 42: We’ll Talk About It
- Chapter 41: Confrontation and Investments
- Chapter 40: Competitor?
- Chapter 39: The Performance of the Soap Factory
- Chapter 38: All Set!
- Chapter 37: At the Realty
- Chapter 36: Looking to Increase Life Quality
- Chapter 35: Helmarte Soap Works Now Open for Business
- Chapter 34: The Production Process
- Chapter 33: The Opening of the Plant
- Chapter 32: Finished Construction
- Chapter 31: During the Construction
- Chapter 30: The Construction of the Soap Manufacturing Plant
- Chapter 29: The Important Day
- Chapter 28: Meeting the Merchant Guildmaster
- Chapter 27: Heading to the Merchant Guild
- Chapter 26: It’s Settled!
- Chapter 25: Business Plan
- Chapter 24: Sponsorship
- Chapter 23: The Terms
- Chapter 22: Business Proposal
- Chapter 21: Product Demonstration
- Chapter 20: Making a lot of Soap
- Chapter 19: Mother’s Here
- Chapter 18: Making Soap
- Chapter 17: Buying Ingredients for Soap
- Chapter 16: A Month Later
- Chapter 15: The Improvements
- Chapter 14: The Leaks
- Chapter 13: Implementing Basic Reforms
- Chapter 12: Contract Signing
- Chapter 11: Returning Home
- Chapter 10: The Job’s Done
- Chapter 9: Agreement
- Chapter 8: Proving Oneself
- Chapter 7: The Arduous Work
- Chapter 6: First Day of Work
- Chapter 5: The Dinner
- Chapter 4: Realizations
- Chapter 3: Value of Money and Determination
- Chapter 2: The Medieval World
- Chapter 1: Reincarnation
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