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How to Start a Clubhouse Room (and Keep Your Audience Engaged) Sure, you can speak in someone else's Clubhouse room. But you may have more fun (and get more attention) creating your own.

By Adam Soccolich

This story appears in the April 2021 issue of Entrepreneur. Subscribe »

NurPhoto | Getty Images

Sure, on Clubhouse, you can speak in someone else's room. But you may have more fun (and get more attention) creating your own. Four prominent users explain how to draw an audience.

Recruit experts.

If you just start a room, nobody will care. But if you start a room with true experts in a field, you're starting strong. "Your room should be dense with notable insights and worth the time of both your speakers and audience," says Josh Constine, principal investor and head of content at SignalFire. The more Clubhouse followers an expert has, the bigger the audience they'll draw in.

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