Instagram Threads, Meta‘s X rival, is now making things simpler for creators, businesses, and others that want more sophisticated tools to manage their presence on the platform, while Meta employs monetary prizes to entice TikTok producers to Instagram and Facebook. Adam Mosseri, the president of Instagram, revealed a few new capabilities that will be added to Threads on Thursday. These include the ability to schedule posts and check more analytics in Insights and once this is done, a post on Threads will show up in the user’s drafts folder once it has been scheduled.
Last Thursday, Threads announced the launch of three new features. Users may now schedule posts, get insights from individual postings, examine the stats for specific posts within the Insights dashboard and add a creative touch when reposting and sharing quotes on the Meta-owned social networking platform Mosseri announced in a social media post. According to the corporation, the Markup tool will initially be made available in a few areas before being made available worldwide, while the first two functionalities are being broadly implemented. Only a month after Threads enabled users to republish photographs without referencing the originating post, these functionalities were added. This addition gives Threads users a method to monitor trends over a certain time period, such as their views, number of followers, regional demographics, amount and kind of interactions, and more.
According to a post by Threads, the scheduler may be accessible using the composer’s three-dot menu. Here, you’ll hit “Schedule,” select a time and day, and then tap “Schedule” once again to make sure. You may update or remove the planned posts before they go live by going to your drafts folder.
Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri, who also manages Threads, revealed the upcoming improvements in a post. He emphasized that the purpose of these new features Markup, Post Insights, and Post Scheduling is to enable consumers to control their online presence.
He said that Threads is introducing a new tool that lets users “mark up” a message they’re reposting in order to provide their own unique perspective. Mosseri didn’t explain what that means or offer an example, but previous research by tech enthusiast Chris Messina suggests that Threads would have a new symbol next to the buttons that allow users to post images, GIFs, voice, hashtags, and other content.
One of the most desired features on the platform has been post-scheduling. Users were unable to plan a post at a later time at this time. But now that the functionality has been added, Threads is resolving this issue. The three-dot menu (located in the upper-right corner of the composer screen) has the ability to schedule a post. This allows users to manually choose the time and date that they would like the post to become live.
Users may draw directly on a Thread post by selecting tools like an arrow tool or highlighter pen from the panel that appears when they click the squiggle symbol. Lindsey Gamble also noticed this feature last week and shared a screenshot of it posted on Threads.
The post can be modified or removed before it is published, and it will show up in the user’s drafts folder. The writer also cleared the air about Gadgets360 members who were able to find the functionality, which seems to allow users to plan posts up to 76 days (two months and 17 days) in advance, which is a long period of time.
Post insights are then being made available to all Threads users. Users will be able to examine analytics like views and interactions for each post on both the web client and mobile apps. The profile tab now includes a new insights icon at the top. To view all of the postings and associated insights, users may choose a date range on this screen and then press See all. Additionally, users have the option to sort the posts by responses, likes, or views.
The Markup tool is the last new feature available to Threads users. Every time a user quote-shares or reposts a content on the platform, the new feature launches. To give the original post a unique touch, users may now add highlights, red arrows, or draw things. Interestingly, this function is only accessible in a few countries at the moment, but it will probably be supplied worldwide in the future.
Considering that users are increasingly frequently sharing online clips, such as news articles, where they have highlighted or underlined in a screenshot, this is a strange kind of feature for Threads. The need for a tool to immediately mark up postings on Threads has not been very high among users.
In contrast to social networking competitors like X, Bluesky, and Mastodon, the functionality does provide Threads users with something special, and that could be the objective.