LinkedIn

LinkedIn private mode: What it is and when to use it

Christina Miranda
LAST UPDATED
June 14, 2024
READING TIME
7 min.

Letting someone know you’ve seen them on LinkedIn has many benefits, but sometimes you may need to turn on that ninja mode.

Luckily, LinkedIn also allows turning on a Private mode so you can research some leads privately before letting them know you’re interested in them.

In this guide, we’ll tell you all about LinkedIn's private modes and how to use them correctly.

LinkedIn’s viewing modes

There are three main modes in which you can view other profiles. Public, semi-private, and private.

These viewing modes allow users to control how they appear to others when viewing profiles and are primarily designed to balance privacy concerns with professional networking needs.

Choosing the appropriate viewing mode depends on your networking goals and preferences for privacy.

Public mode is generally used when you want to openly network and engage with others, while private and anonymous modes are suitable for more discreet or exploratory profile viewing.

LinkedIn public mode

By keeping your viewing mode public, viewers will be able to see exactly who visited their profile and may be notified too.

Your LinkedIn profile characteristics, such as industry and title, may also be visible to them.

When you select public mode you can also choose what information will be visible, like your last name (ex. Jane Doe or Jane D.)

These are the other details you can edit in your public profile visibility:

Access this in Settings → Visibility → Edit your public profile.

Visiting profiles in public mode offers several benefits too, such as:

  • Increase your visibility when your viewers receive a notification that you viewed their profile
  • Initiate contact without directly sending a message out of the blue
  • Show active interest in their background or professional updates
  • Demonstrate transparency to build stronger relationships
  • Showcase active engagement

With lemlist, you can include a profile visit as a step in your sequence!

LinkedIn semi-private mode

This mode is also called “private profile characteristics”.

None of your personal information will be revealed, but the viewer will be able to see your job title and industry.

This is particularly useful when you are researching specific profiles for your company, but you don’t really want your personal information to be revealed, nor do you want to be contacted.

Other situations where LinkedIn's semi-private mode can be beneficial are:

  • Networking with new connections without revealing your full identity
  • Discretely gathering information when looking for a new job
  • Conducting competitive analysis
  • Researching market trends without alerting the owner your specific interest

Semi-private mode strikes a balance between anonymity and providing enough information to facilitate meaningful networking and research activities on the platform.

LinkedIn private mode

When you choose this mode, LinkedIn will not reveal any information about you to the person whose profile you viewed.

They will only see that an anonymous LinkedIn member viewed their profile.

This mode can be very useful and your best ally in the research process.

Essentially, you will be able to visit the profiles you need without leaving your fingerprints behind.

When to use LinkedIn private mode

LinkedIn’s private mode can be very beneficial in many scenarios when you wish to maintain your privacy.

However, we do not recommend sticking to the private mode permanently, as the main goal on LinkedIn should be to grow your network and build relationships. Therefore making your name be seen is important.

So, when should you be using private mode on your profile?

Researching competitors

Businesses can get very competitive and staying ahead of the curve is crucial so that your business is relevant in your industry.

This requires a bit of research to know what your competitors are doing, and check how it compares to your own business.

Now, don’t get ahead of yourselves, we’re not implying you should copy your competitors’ work! But it is useful to know what their clients like about them and what they don’t so you can also set strategies to make adjustments to your own business.

Take inspiration from what you or their clients like.

Obviously, in this regard, you want to be discreet, so keeping a low profile when you research competitors is imperative.

What could your strategy look like?

  • Turn on private mode
  • Focus on relevant profiles
  • Gather insights on job histories, skills, endorsements, mutual connections, and activity updates.
  • Always stay ethical!

By using LinkedIn private mode effectively, you can gather valuable competitive intelligence while maintaining confidentiality and professionalism in your research approach.

Did you find any interesting clients in your competitor’s network? See how to reach out to them!

Preliminary research of your leads

Building your list of leads for your outreach campaigns is tricky business.

You can’t just select every lead you see out there, you also want to segment them accordingly. A lead that is not a top priority for your current campaign may be perfect for the next, so you don’t want to blow your chances.

Conducting preliminary lead research with LinkedIn’s private mode guarantees anonymity so you don’t alert them too soon that they’re under your radar, this will ensure that you can contact them at the perfect time.

Additionally, getting insight into your leads will allow a deeper personalization when the time comes to craft your outreach messages.

Once you have researched and selected your leads for your campaign, be sure to use the lemlist Chrome extension.

Selecting candidates for recruitment

Similar to researching for leads, when you’re looking through a list of candidates for a job position, you want to keep a low profile so as not to alert the candidates of the research process that’s going on behind closed doors.

You also don’t want to give them false hopes.

Researching candidates in private mode guarantees an unbiased evaluation and a discrete screening of candidates based on their professional backgrounds, skills, experience, and mutual connections.

This also gives you a chance to see their network, identify shared connections or affiliations that may provide additional context or references.

As a recruiter, if you need some inspiration to reach out to your candidates, we’ll leave you with 5 recruiting templates!

Looking for general inspiration

In order to stand out on LinkedIn you need to have an optimized profile.

To make sure that you’re keeping up with current LinkedIn trends you may want to research some thought leaders in your industry or other LinkedIn influencers.

However, you’ll want this process to be discrete, so turn on your private mode to do your research.

This will give you inspiration for posts, headlines, summaries, etc. You’ll also be able to redefine your LinkedIn content strategy by looking into other profiles.

Other aspects you can take inspiration from are:

  • Innovative practices
  • Networking strategies
  • Industry trends
  • Skill development
  • Career paths
You can also gain insight to Top LinkedIn trends with Taplio!

How to activate LinkedIn private mode

Let’s walk through the steps to set up your Anonymous mode together.

Step 1

On the top bar, click on the “Me” section and go to “Settings & Privacy”

Step 2

Once you’ve accessed your settings, go to “Visibility”.

To change your viewing mode, click on “Profile viewing options”. As you can see, the set one, in this case, is “Your name and headline”, in other words, public mode.

Step 3

At this point, you can choose your viewing mode.

You can choose between “Your name and headline”, which is the public mode. As seen in the image. However, don’t forget you can customize the information that will be available.

You can also pick “private profile characteristics”, which is the semi-private mode, where the people whose profiles you’ve visited will simply see your job title or area of expertise.

And lastly, you can pick “private mode”, where others will only be able to see “Anonymous LinkedIn Member has viewed your profile”.

Key takeaways

Every aspect of LinkedIn is a component of your LinkedIn strategy.

And visiting people’s profiles is definitely one of these components. So you want to make sure that you use LinkedIn’s private mode when you don’t want to alert others that you’re working behind the shadows!

FAQs

Is LinkedIn private mode really private?

Yes. When you visit someone’s profile with your private mode turned on all they will see is that “Anonymous LinkedIn member” has visited their profile. None of your information will be revealed.

How do I know who viewed my profile without a premium account?

Go to the analytics section by scrolling down in your profile.

You will be able to see who viewed your profile during the last 90 days.

Although you will not be able to see personal information, you’ll see their company. To gain more viewer insights you’ll need a premium account.

Should I keep my LinkedIn private or public?

It depends on what your searches are for at that time.

If you want to do some background checks or general research, it’s best to turn on private mode. But if you want to let someone know you’re interested in them, make sure they can identify you easily by turning on public mode.

Can someone know when you search for them on LinkedIn?

When you search for someone on LinkedIn they will receive a notification.

The amount of information they receive about you will be dependant on your privacy settings. Turn on private mode to remain completely anonymous.

Christina Miranda
Content creator and translator @ lempire
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AI evaluation precision, gamified KPIs
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Complex sales structures and businesses of all sizes
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Connected planning
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Companies with complex sales structures
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Companies who want to automate commission calculations and payouts
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Companies with modern sales culture and businesses who want real-time insights
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Backbone of a business's internal operations.
Backbone of customer-centric interactions and operations.
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To centralize and streamline core business processes in a company.
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Focus
Internal operations and processes across departments (finance, accounting, inventory, supply chain, HR, and sales).
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Manages
Internal business data like financial data, inventory levels, production details, supply chain, HR info.
All customer data like contact info, purchase history, communication history, customer preferences and more.
Users
Finance, accounting, operations, supply chain, and HR departments.
Customer-facing teams like sales, marketing, and customer service.
Benefits
Streamlines operations, improves data accuracy, enhances decision-making, boosts collaboration, increases productivity.
Improves customer relationships, increases sales, strengthens customer service, personalizes marketing campaigns, provides insights.
Price
$150 per user per year on average.
$10 to $30 per user per month on average.
PRM Tool
Rating
Feature
Pro
Con
Mobile App
Integrations
Free Plan
Pricing
4.65
star
star
star
star
star-half
Org-wide alignment
User-friendly layout and database
Suboptimal as a personal CRM
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Lack of tracking system
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Team: $20/month
Business: $45/month
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Social Media Integration
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Business: €14/month
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3.1
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star
Simple iOS app
Ideal for non-tech-savvy users
iPhone only
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iOS only
Limited
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1-month trial
$1.49/month or
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3.6
star
star
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Smart Contact Management
Feature-rich and flexible
Reported bugs
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Rich
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7-day trial
Premium: $13.99/month
Teams: $17.99/month
4.4
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Customizable Interface
Customizable for teamwork
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square-xmark
Standard: $24/member
Premium: $39/member
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Integrated Calling
Integrated Calling
Too sales-oriented & pricey
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Rich
square-xmark
14-day trial
Startup: $59/user/month
Professional: $329/user/month
4.8
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Business Card Scanning
Business Card Scanning
Mobile only
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Limited
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4.45
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160+ app integrations
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Rich
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14-day
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€15/month/seat billed annually
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4.2
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30-day
square-xmark
But it offers reduced price to authorised nonprofit organisations
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€500/user/month billed annually (includes Einstein AI)
Best overall operational CRM
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star
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square-xmark
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Limited to 3 users
Comprehensive incentive management
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Small-medium businesses and automation
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4.1
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star
star
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Limited 10 users
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Free plan for very small teams up to 10
CRM goal
Increase the sales conversion rate for qualified leads from marketing automation campaigns by 10% in the next 6 months.
SMART Breakdown
1. Specific: It targets a specific area (conversion rate) for a defined segment (qualified leads from marketing automation).
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Table
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Data-centric
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Focus
Interactions across various channels and touchpoints, both online and offline.
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Automatically collects, organizes, tags, and makes data available in real-time.
Helps businesses track customer interactions, sales pipelines, prospects, and service requests.
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Personalized marketing campaigns, targeted advertising, content customization across multiple channels.
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HubSpot, Salesforce Sales Cloud Lightning Professional, and Zoho CRM
CRM
Free plan
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Best for
Con
1. HubSpot CRM
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Sales automation
Sales teams
Up to 1,000 contacts
2. Insightly
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Custom fields
Basic needs
Not enough info about the free plan
3. Agile CRM
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Deal and sales pipeline tracking
Small teams
Up to 10 users
4. Zoho CRM
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Lead and contact management
Businesses of all sizes
Limited to 3 users
5. ClickUp
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Unlimited tasks and unlimited members
Personal use
Up to 100MB storage
6. EngageBay
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Live chat
Small and midsize enterprises
Up to 1,000 branded emails per month
7. Bitrix24
square-check
Unlimited users and 5 scrum teams
Big teams
Up to 5GB of cloud storage
8. FreshSales
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Easy to use and simple setup
Beginners
Up to 3 users
9. Mailchimp
square-check
Very beginner friendly
Marketing teams
Send up to 500 branded emails per month
Type of Affiliate Marketing
Unattached
Related
Involved
Format
Paid advertising
Social media or YouTube channels
Dedicated website or blog
Focus
Quick income
Your niche
Your audience
Engagement with your audience
square-xmark
square-check
square-check
square-check
square-check
Very close connection with your audience
Pro
Little effort
Higher credibility thanks to your niche
Long-lasting and scalable
Con
Paid ads cost a lot
Potential for bias since you don’t use the thing you promote
Require time, effort, and dedication

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