What’s happened? TikTok announced the launch of Bulletin Board, a new feature allowing creators to establish a dedicated channel where they can post updates, images, or videos to their followers. The tool resembles other broadcast-style features from rival platforms but is now integrated directly into TikTok’s ecosystem.
- The feature supports text, image, and video posts, and enables followers to react with emojis (but not respond with full comments).
- Access is currently limited: creators must be at least 18 years old and have at least 50,000 followers to launch a board.
- Followers join a creator’s board by tapping its name under the creator’s bio; once subscribed, they receive inbox notifications for new posts.
Why this is important: First, this feature changes the way creators can engage their audience on TikTok, moving from broad feed posts to opt-in channels where followers expect updates. That means creators may direct their best content through this channel, increasing loyalty and potentially monetisation without feed noise. For brands and creators, this is another lever for audience control.
Second, it underscores TikTok’s strategy to reinforce creator retention. As platforms compete for influencer loyalty, direct-to-follower features become must-haves. By launching bulletin boards, TikTok is aligning itself with a trend of “channelised creator updates” (akin to Instagram’s broadcast channels) and signalling that the battle for creator time and monetisation is far from over.

Why should I care? If you follow creators, this means you may soon see “Subscribe to Bulletin Board” prompts where you once only clicked “Follow”. For you, it means the updates from top creators could move off-feed and into dedicated inbox notifications, which could be useful (early-access news, giveaways) or crowded (another notification to manage).
- You’ll get access to more curated content if you opt into a board: fewer algorithm surprises, more direct creator updates.
- It may affect how creators decide where to post their exclusive stuff, as boards could become the place for “first look” content or behind-the-scenes updates.
- If you’re a creator yourself, reaching that 50k-follower threshold and activating a board may become a new milestone for community engagement.

Okay, so what’s next? The big question now is how creators will actually use Bulletin Board. Different genres will likely pick it up at different speeds, and it won’t be surprising if music artists, sports personalities, or news creators start experimenting first. Followers will also decide quickly whether these boards feel valuable, especially if creators offer things like early announcements, exclusive updates, or behind-the-scenes moments. Another piece of the puzzle is notifications: this could become a genuinely helpful alert system or turn into yet another source of constant pings.
TikTok will also need to stay on top of moderation and safety tools for Bulletin Boards, particularly because the feature encourages a more direct, subscription-style connection between creators and fans. How well the platform balances engagement with user comfort will determine how far this new tool goes.