In another update to its audio rooms feature, Twitter is now rolling out new ways for users to share and promote Spaces. Users will now be able to write a tweet directly from their Spaces chat room, with hashtags to attract listeners to their content. Users could already tweet while listening to a Space, but the update will make it easier to write tweets about what’s happening in real time in audio rooms.
Twitter is also adding a “guest management” feature to the feature. With these new controls, users can more easily see who is participating and who has requested to speak during their Spaces.
Until recently, Twitter only offered users a list of active Spaces curated by Twitter. But with the update, it will be possible to search for Spaces by the room title, name or host's at in a tab specifically designed for these searches.
Some Spaces updates are only available on iOS for now
But it's worth noting here that the guest management features and the Spaces search tab are currently only available to iOS users. Twitter has not yet announced when the two new features will be released to all users.
https://twitter.com/TwitterSpaces/status/1420801679457460224
“To make it easier to find Spaces that interest you, users in our beta tab can now search for live or upcoming Spaces by title, host name, or at sign on iOS. This makes all currently happening and upcoming Spaces searchable.”
https://twitter.com/TwitterSpaces/status/1420802634102018054
“About guest management updates:
– we’ve moved the participant control bar to the top of the management page to make it more accessible
– we’ve added a section for presenters to better see what kind of participants are in their Space (including users who have requested to speak)”
These updates come on the heels of other actions Twitter is taking to publicize and popularize its Spaces feature, the social network's answer to the Clubhouse. Twitter recently announced that it is basically replacing Fleets, its stories-like function, through Spaces. And since March, the platform has been testing a monetization function for content creators on Spaces.
Through which channels you reach those people, classic and out of the box. Engadget