Most apps have a voice message feature and allow users to listen back on the snippets before hitting send. This prevents them from sending recordings that are hardly audible or worse—messages that are just minutes of silence. Up until recently, WhatsApp didn’t have a playback option. But this week Meta updated its messaging app for iOS, Android, and the web to allow you to check your recordings before hitting send. The feature is currently rolling out for mobile, so if it hasn’t hit your device yet, check your app store for an update. Before WhatsApp’s latest update, the message would send automatically the second you let go of it unless you locked that mic button. Now, when you release your finger, the recording will stop but your message will wait for you as a draft until you’re ready to send. In the meantime, you can listen back to your voice message to make sure you didn’t say anything bad, that a truck didn’t drown out your voice, or that the recording isn’t just the sound of your phone in your pocket because your headphone’s mic was off. If you’re on WhatsApp’s web client, you’ll also be able to add more to your message. When you click on the mic button, the recording will start and the icon will immediately turn into a pause button—click it to stop recording. When you do, the button will turn back into a microphone. Click on it again, and continue recording as many times as you want before sending. Unfortunately, you can’t do the same on mobile. When you hit record on the Android and iOS apps, the microphone icon will turn into a stop button. Once you tap it, your options will be to listen to your message by tapping the play button, send it, or delete it completely. This new feature will allow you to send better voice messages, which will only up your chances of people listening to them on the other end. Just don’t abuse the privilege by sending them entire podcasts.