
There’s also a list of LinkedIn employees on Twitter.Ĥ. Based on the comments, though, good luck actually talking to technical support.Ģ. According to, LinkedIn’s phone number is 65, then press 5 to reach a live person. If you don’t get the response you need, here are some additional ways to try to escalate your issue:ġ. What happens then? Well, LinkedIn isn’t known for their customer service - nice enough people once you get to someone, but they’re massively understaffed and overloaded. You can even attach a file if needed, such as a screenshot of the problem: That will finally put you on a contact form that will allow you to submit your question to customer service. Once you do, now at the top of the page there will be an Ask Customer Service tab (why it’s not there on the first page is a mystery to me, but it isn’t):Ĥ. At this point, click on any of the FAQ entries – doesn’t matter which one. This takes you to the LinkedIn Customer Service Center, where they invite you to first try to help yourself:ģ. Scroll down to the bottom of any page on LinkedIn:Ģ.

I won’t bore you with all the dead-ends I tried that didn’t work.let me just show you what did:ġ.

It actually took me a couple of minutes to figure out. I had my attention called to this issue on Twitter today:
#Contact linkedin customer service phone how to#
Also, if you don’t get any response at the link above, there are some ideas on how to escalate your issue at the end of the post. If you’d like to see how to find it for yourself, read on. First off, let me say that it’s ludicrous that this even merits a blog post, but LinkedIn has so obfuscated the process that it takes a lot of digging to find it.
