By Kushal Magar · April 3, 2026 · 7 min read
How to Get a LinkedIn Link From a Website in 2026 (Step-by-Step)
LinkedIn links embedded in websites are direct shortcuts to prospect profiles. Every team page, blog author bio, and conference speaker listing potentially contains LinkedIn URLs. This step-by-step guide shows how to find and extract them efficiently.
Websites are rich sources of LinkedIn profile URLs — team pages list employees with social links, blog posts credit authors with LinkedIn bios, conference pages link to speaker profiles, and company footers include social media icons. Extracting these links creates prospect lists with LinkedIn data already attached.
This step-by-step guide walks through finding LinkedIn links on websites manually, extracting them at scale with automation tools, and enriching extracted profiles with email and phone data for complete outreach lists.
Quick Summary
Step-by-step guide to extracting LinkedIn links from websites. Manual checks for individual sites, PhantomBuster for automated extraction from team pages, and SyncGTM waterfall enrichment to convert LinkedIn URLs into complete prospect profiles with email and phone data.
TL;DR
- Step 1: Check team page, about page, and footer social links for LinkedIn URLs
- Step 2: Use browser DevTools to search page source for linkedin.com/in/ URLs
- Step 3: Use PhantomBuster or web scraping tools to extract LinkedIn links from multiple pages
- Step 4: Enrich extracted LinkedIn profiles with SyncGTM for email, phone, and company data
- Step 5: Add enriched contacts to your CRM and outreach sequences
Step 1: Manual Check for LinkedIn Links
Navigate to the website's Team, About, or Leadership page. Look for LinkedIn icons (the blue "in" logo) next to team member names. Click each to open their LinkedIn profile. Copy the profile URL from the browser address bar.
Also check: blog post author bios (often include LinkedIn links), footer social media sections (may link to company page or founder profiles), and Contact pages (sometimes list individual LinkedIn URLs for sales or support contacts).
Step 2: Search Page Source for Hidden Links
Open browser DevTools (F12 or right-click > Inspect). Go to the Elements tab and use Ctrl+F to search for "linkedin.com/in/" within the page HTML. This finds LinkedIn URLs embedded in metadata, JSON-LD structured data, and hidden elements that are not visible on the rendered page.
Alternative: View Page Source (Ctrl+U) and search for the same string. This catches LinkedIn URLs in script tags, microdata, and og: meta tags that some websites include for SEO or social sharing.
Step 3: Automated Extraction at Scale
For extracting LinkedIn links from multiple websites: PhantomBuster's Web Scraper extracts all links from a webpage and filters by domain (linkedin.com). Feed it a list of team page URLs and collect all LinkedIn links in a spreadsheet.
Bardeen.ai offers a simpler browser-based approach: record a workflow that navigates to a team page, finds LinkedIn link elements, and copies them to Google Sheets. No code required. Best for non-technical users extracting links from 10-50 websites.
Step 4: Enrich LinkedIn Profiles With Contact Data
Once you have LinkedIn URLs, enrich them with email, phone, and company data. Upload the LinkedIn URLs to SyncGTM waterfall enrichment — the system queries 50+ providers and returns verified emails, direct dials, firmographic data, and buying signals for each profile.
This transforms a list of LinkedIn URLs from a website into a complete prospect database ready for outreach. At $99/mo, SyncGTM handles the enrichment at scale without separate subscriptions for email finding, phone data, and company research.
Step 5: Add to CRM and Launch Outreach
Enriched contacts sync directly to your CRM via SyncGTM's native integrations with HubSpot, Salesforce, and Pipedrive. Each record includes LinkedIn URL, verified email, phone number, company data, and any detected buying signals.
Launch multichannel outreach: send LinkedIn connection requests (via Expandi or Lemlist), personalized cold emails (via Instantly or Lemlist), and phone follow-ups (via your dialer). The LinkedIn URL from the website becomes the anchor for a complete prospecting sequence.



