Copy the public LinkedIn URL
Use the linkedin.com/in/... profile link that you want to share publicly.
Share your LinkedIn profile in one scan for networking, recruiting, and business-card use cases.
The strongest template pages do not stop at one CTA. They connect the exact phrasing people use in Google with the generator, the guide, and the use-case layer.
Start with the destination, match the QR to the print surface, then export the format that will hold up in real production instead of improvising at the last minute.
Use the linkedin.com/in/... profile link that you want to share publicly.
Confirm the QR opens the correct profile and the profile is complete enough for first-time visitors.
Use SVG for business cards and PNG for digital decks or PDFs.
Add context such as "Scan to connect on LinkedIn" so the scan intent is obvious.
Think in terms of the final artifact, not just the generator. The strongest template pages help people picture the exact card, sign, insert, or badge they are about to ship.
Use when a recruiter should move from paper to a professional profile in one scan.
Lets networking happen quickly without asking someone to search your name later.
Helpful when you want a polished profile handoff alongside company materials.
Use when a recruiter should move from paper to a professional profile in one scan.
Most template mistakes are not about the destination. They happen because someone prints a PNG too small, exports the wrong size, or sends a vendor the wrong format.
Use PNG for decks, social mocks, PDFs, quick approvals, and surfaces where the final size is already decided.
Use SVG for cards, packaging, posters, menus, signage, and vendor handoff. This is the safer default when print is involved.
LinkedIn QR codes work when you want professional identity transfer in one scan. That makes them especially strong on networking materials where a short text URL would otherwise be retyped.
The QR is only one part of the experience. Make sure the LinkedIn profile headline, photo, and top links are ready before sending a large print run.
Searchers looking for a LinkedIn QR code usually want resume and business-card guidance, not only a blank input box. Covering those offline contexts makes the page more useful and more likely to match search intent.
Yes. LinkedIn QR codes are commonly used on resumes, portfolios, and speaker bios.
No. This generator is free and works with a normal public LinkedIn profile link.
Use SVG for crisp print output and PNG for quick digital placement.
You should regenerate the QR if the public profile URL changes after printing.