The fastest way to find any company's LinkedIn page is to search the company name on LinkedIn and filter results to "Companies." That handles about 80% of lookups in under 10 seconds. But with 69M+ company pages on the platform (DemandSage, Jan 2026), generic names, subsidiaries, and newly created pages regularly bury the result you actually need.
This guide covers five methods that work when the obvious search doesn't - from Google X-ray operators to URL construction tricks that most recruiters never learn. Each method solves a different problem, so you'll know exactly which one to reach for depending on the situation.
Why invest time in company page research at all? Because according to LinkedIn Talent Solutions (2025), company page followers are 95% more likely to accept InMail and 81% more likely to reply. The company page is your single richest source of hiring signals, org structure data, and competitive intelligence before you ever craft an outreach message.
TL;DR: Five methods to find any company's LinkedIn page: direct search, Google X-ray (site:linkedin.com/company), URL construction, numeric company ID extraction, and the employee-profile pivot. LinkedIn hosts 69M+ company pages (DemandSage, 2026), and page followers are 95% more likely to accept InMail (LinkedIn Talent Solutions, 2025).Why Do Recruiters Need Company LinkedIn Pages?
According to Jobvite's 2024 Recruiter Nation Survey, 87% of recruiters regularly use LinkedIn to evaluate candidates. But the real intelligence sits on company pages, not individual profiles. A company's LinkedIn page tells you who works there now, who left recently, what roles are open, and how fast the team is growing - all before you send a single message.
Company page followers respond to recruiter outreach at dramatically higher rates than non-followers. That means researching a company page before reaching out isn't just homework - it directly lifts the metrics that matter.
Here's what recruiters typically extract from a company page and why each data point matters for sourcing:
Pre-outreach intelligence. Understanding a company's size, industry, recent hires, and team structure before contacting candidates who work there. Mentioning a specific detail from the company page - "I saw your engineering team expanded last quarter" - makes outreach feel personal rather than templated. That personalization directly affects response rates.
Hiring signal detection. Active job postings on a company page reveal open requisitions, team growth areas, and budget availability. A surge in engineering postings signals scale-up. A freeze in postings signals cost pressure or a hiring pause. Agency recruiters use these signals to time their client pitches and prioritize which companies to pursue.
Employee mapping and org charting. The People tab on a company page lets you filter employees by department, job function, title, and location. This is how sourcing teams build org-level maps of target companies before executing a search. Knowing there are 14 software engineers, two engineering managers, and a VP of Engineering gives you a clearer picture than a job title alone ever could.
Competitive intelligence. Monitoring competitor companies' pages for headcount growth, new-hire patterns, and leadership changes helps recruiters identify passive candidates likely to be receptive to outreach. If a VP of Engineering just left, the team underneath them is worth contacting - they're probably re-evaluating their options.
And here's a stat that connects directly to sourcing strategy: 58% of people who follow a company's LinkedIn page say they want to work at that company, per LinkedIn Talent Solutions (2025). That's a built-in warm audience for any recruiter targeting that employer's talent - but you need the company page to identify and reach them.
Method 1: Search LinkedIn Directly
LinkedIn's built-in search handles the majority of company lookups without any special technique. According to DemandSage (Jan 2026), LinkedIn hosts 69M+ company pages, making it the largest professional company directory available. For most well-known companies, a direct search returns the right page in seconds.
Step by step:
- Type the company name into LinkedIn's main search bar at the top of any page
- Click the "Companies" tab in the search filter bar
- Review the results - the company page usually appears in the first three listings
- Look at the employee count and industry displayed under each result to confirm you've found the right one
The company page displays employee count, recent posts, job openings, the Life tab (employer branding content), and - for Premium subscribers - headcount growth data broken down by function and seniority.
When direct search works best:
- The company has a unique or distinctive name
- The company has 50+ employees listed on LinkedIn
- You know the exact legal name (not just a product name or abbreviation)
When direct search fails:
- Generic names like "Atlas," "Summit," or "Core" return hundreds of matches
- The company recently rebranded and the old name still dominates results
- Small companies with fewer than 10 employees and minimal LinkedIn presence
- Subsidiary or division names that don't match the parent company
Narrowing tip: Add the industry or city to your search query. "Acme Technologies San Francisco" returns far fewer results than just "Acme." You can also check the company's website for a "Follow us on LinkedIn" link in the footer - many companies link directly to their page.
If direct search returns the right company page within 30 seconds, you're done. Move on to the research. If it doesn't, Methods 2 through 5 exist for exactly that reason.
Method 2: Use Google X-Ray Search
Google X-ray search resolves company page lookups that LinkedIn's own search can't handle - particularly effective for generic names where a direct search returns hundreds of results. Google indexes roughly 85% of public LinkedIn pages, giving it a broader searchable index than LinkedIn's internal algorithm. The site: operator restricts results to only LinkedIn company page URLs.
The basic query:
site:linkedin.com/company "Company Name"
This tells Google to search only within linkedin.com/company/ URLs for pages containing the exact company name. Because Google indexes the full text of LinkedIn company pages - including descriptions, specialties, and listed employees - it catches matches that LinkedIn's internal search algorithm misses.
Advanced X-ray variations:
Add location: site:linkedin.com/company "Acme" "San Francisco"
Add industry: site:linkedin.com/company "Acme" "software" OR "technology"
Exclude false matches: site:linkedin.com/company "Atlas" -"Atlas Copco" -"Atlas Air"
Search by domain: site:linkedin.com/company "acme.com" - this works because many company pages include the website URL in their description field
X-ray search is particularly effective for companies with generic names. Searching "Atlas" on LinkedIn's own search returns hundreds of company pages across every industry. Searching site:linkedin.com/company "Atlas" "HR technology" "Austin" narrows to exactly one result. For a complete breakdown of X-ray and Boolean techniques that apply beyond company search, see our Boolean search cheat sheet for recruiters.
This method also works when a company has recently changed its name. Google often indexes both the old and new company page URLs, so a search for the former name still returns the current page. That's particularly useful during M&A activity when company names change faster than LinkedIn's search index updates.
Troubleshooting tips:
- If Google returns no results, the company page may be too new for Google's index. Try LinkedIn's direct search instead, or wait a few days and retry.
- If results include individual profiles (
/in/URLs), make sure you're usingsite:linkedin.com/companynot justsite:linkedin.com. - Wrap multi-word company names in quotes. Without quotes, Google treats each word separately and returns irrelevant matches.
Method 3: Construct the URL Manually
Every LinkedIn company page follows a predictable URL pattern. If you can guess the slug, you can navigate directly to the page without searching at all - it takes about 5 seconds.
The pattern: https://www.linkedin.com/company/[company-slug]/
Slug conventions:
- Lowercase the company name
- Replace spaces with hyphens
- Remove punctuation (periods, commas, apostrophes)
- Remove common suffixes like "Inc," "LLC," "Ltd"
- Ampersands are sometimes kept as "-&-" or removed entirely
Examples:
| Company Name | LinkedIn URL Slug |
|---|---|
| Goldman Sachs | linkedin.com/company/goldman-sachs/ |
| McKinsey & Company | linkedin.com/company/mckinsey/ |
| Deloitte | linkedin.com/company/deloitte/ |
| PwC | linkedin.com/company/pwc/ |
| Johnson & Johnson | linkedin.com/company/johnson-&-johnson/ |
The slug isn't always predictable. Some companies use abbreviations, former names, or custom slugs that don't match their current branding. McKinsey uses "mckinsey" rather than "mckinsey-company" or "mckinsey-and-company." PwC uses "pwc" rather than "pricewaterhousecoopers." When in doubt, try the shortest plausible version first.
Numeric ID fallback: Every LinkedIn company page also has a permanent numeric ID. If the text slug doesn't work or you get a 404 error, you can use https://www.linkedin.com/company/[numeric-id]/ instead. Finding that numeric ID is where Method 4 comes in.
Edge cases worth knowing:
- Companies that rebranded may have their old name as the slug even though the page displays the new name
- Acquired companies sometimes redirect to the parent company's page automatically
- International subsidiaries often have separate pages with country-specific slugs (e.g., "deloitte-us" vs. "deloitte-uk")
Pin scans 850M+ profiles across LinkedIn and other sources so you don't have to search one company page at a time - try it free.
Method 4: Extract the Numeric Company ID
When you can see a company page but need its permanent identifier - or when the text slug returns a 404 - the numeric company ID is your reliable fallback. This ID never changes, even when a company rebrands, gets acquired, or updates its URL slug. It's the most stable way to reference a LinkedIn company page.
How to find it:
- Navigate to any company page (even through a Google result or an employee profile link)
- Click "See all [X] employees" or "See all [X] jobs"
- Look at the URL that loads in your browser's address bar
- Find the parameter
f_C=12345678- that number is the permanent company ID - Construct a direct URL:
https://www.linkedin.com/company/12345678/
A typical LinkedIn company ID is 5-9 digits. If you see a much shorter number (1-4 digits), you've found one of LinkedIn's earliest company pages. Numbers in the hundreds of thousands to low millions are mid-era pages. Recent pages tend to have 8-9 digit IDs. All formats work identically.
When this method is most useful:
API integrations and automation. Most LinkedIn API calls and third-party recruiting tools reference companies by numeric ID, not text slug. If you're building reports, integrating with your ATS, or using automation tools that pull company data, you need the numeric ID.
Companies that rebrand frequently. When a company changes its name, LinkedIn updates the text slug but the numeric ID stays the same. Bookmarking the numeric URL means your saved links never break - a practical consideration for agency recruiters tracking dozens of target accounts.
Resolving redirect chains. After acquisitions, some companies end up with multiple LinkedIn pages. The numeric ID points to the canonical page, helping you avoid redirect loops or landing on an abandoned page.
Alternative extraction method: Right-click anywhere on the company page, select "View Page Source" (Ctrl+U or Cmd+U), and search for "companyId" or "objectUrn." The numeric ID appears in LinkedIn's embedded metadata, usually within the first few hundred lines of source code. This works even if the "See all employees" link isn't loading properly.
Method 5: Start from an Employee's Profile
With 69M+ company pages on LinkedIn, some employers are nearly impossible to find through search or URL guessing. The employee-profile pivot works differently: find one person at the company, then click through to their employer's page. It's indirect, but it resolves cases that the other four methods can't.
How it works:
- Find one person who works at the target company - from an email signature, a conference speaker list, a news article, or a referral
- Visit their LinkedIn profile
- In their Experience section, click on the company name next to their current role
- This takes you directly to the company's LinkedIn page
Why this works when other methods don't:
- The company is a startup with fewer than 10 employees and minimal SEO presence
- The company name is so generic - "Global Solutions," "Premier Services," "NextGen" - that search returns thousands of results
- The company has a LinkedIn page but hasn't posted any content, making it invisible in both LinkedIn and Google search results
- You're looking for a subsidiary or division that shares its parent company's page rather than maintaining its own
Where to find the initial employee:
Check email signatures. If you've exchanged emails with anyone at the company, their signature often includes a LinkedIn profile URL. Conference speaker lists and industry event pages frequently link to speakers' profiles. News articles and press releases name executives - search their names on LinkedIn to find their profiles. Email finder tools can identify people at a given domain, giving you a name to search on LinkedIn.
This method has a secondary benefit: once you're on the company page via an employee's profile, you can immediately access the full employee list. That turns a simple page lookup into a sourcing session. For recruiters exploring channels beyond LinkedIn entirely, check out alternative recruiting platforms that complement LinkedIn's company data with other professional networks.
LinkedIn Company Page URL Cheat Sheet
Reference this table whenever you need to navigate to a specific section of any company's LinkedIn page. Each path appends to the base URL linkedin.com/company/[slug-or-id]/.
| URL Path | What It Shows | Access Level |
|---|---|---|
/ (root) |
Overview: description, employee count, industry, recent posts | Free |
/about/ |
Company details, specialties, website, headquarters location | Free |
/jobs/ |
Active job postings from the company | Free |
/people/ |
Employee directory with department and title filters | Free (limited) / Recruiter (full) |
/life/ |
Culture content, employee stories, office photos | Free |
/posts/ |
Company's recent LinkedIn posts and articles | Free |
/insights/ |
Headcount growth by function, new hire trends, total openings | Premium / Recruiter only |
The /people/ tab deserves special attention for recruiters. On a free LinkedIn account, you can see a sample of employees with basic filtering. With LinkedIn Recruiter, you get full access to filter by department, seniority, years at company, and location. This is the starting point for most sourcing sessions targeting a specific organization.
The /insights/ tab (available to LinkedIn Premium and Recruiter subscribers) pulls from LinkedIn Talent Insights' 12 billion+ data points (LinkedIn Help, 2025). It shows headcount growth by function over time, new hire velocity, job function distribution, and total open roles by seniority. That's the kind of data agency recruiters use to pitch prospective clients: "Your engineering team grew 40% in six months but you have 12 unfilled roles - let's talk."
Free vs. Premium Data Comparison
| Data Point | Free LinkedIn | LinkedIn Premium / Recruiter |
|---|---|---|
| Total employee count | ✅ | ✅ |
| Active job postings | ✅ | ✅ |
| Company description and specialties | ✅ | ✅ |
| Employee directory (basic) | ✅ | ✅ |
| Employee directory (full filters) | ❌ | ✅ |
| Headcount growth by function | ❌ | ✅ |
| New hire velocity / trends | ❌ | ✅ |
| Open roles by seniority | ❌ | ✅ |
| Department-level breakdowns | ❌ | ✅ |
One important caveat: LinkedIn's algorithm has shifted significantly in 2025-2026. Company page organic reach has dropped significantly since 2024, with the algorithm now prioritizing personal profiles and employee-authored content. Personal profiles now drive 2.75x more impressions than company pages (SalesSo, Dec 2025). A quiet company page doesn't mean a quiet company. Check employee posts and news coverage alongside the page itself for a fuller picture.
What to Do After Finding the Company Page
Finding the company page is the starting point, not the end goal. Here's how recruiters turn a page visit into actionable intelligence that improves sourcing outcomes.
Watch for hiring signals. Check the Jobs tab first. A company with 15 open engineering roles is growing fast - the employees already there are fielding recruiter messages constantly, so timing and personalization matter more than volume. Conversely, a company that had 20 open roles last month and now has three is in a hiring freeze. Both signals shape your approach.
Map the org chart. Use the People tab to identify reporting structures. If you're sourcing a Senior Backend Engineer, look at who currently holds similar titles, who manages the team, and how many people sit in the engineering function overall. That context lets you write outreach messages that reference real team dynamics rather than generic job descriptions.
Check recent posts for conversation starters. Even with lower organic reach, company posts reveal product launches, funding announcements, office openings, and team milestones. Referencing a recent company post in your outreach - "I noticed your team just shipped the new payments API" - separates you from every recruiter sending the same template. It works because it proves you did the research.
Identify warm leads in the follower base. Remember the stat: 58% of company page followers want to work at that company. If you can identify followers through CRM integrations or by checking who engages with the company's posts, those candidates are pre-warmed and worth prioritizing in your outreach sequence.
Time your outreach around signals. New leadership hires, recent funding rounds, and rapid headcount growth all create windows where employees and the company itself are more receptive to conversations. Spotted a new CTO three weeks ago? The rest of the engineering team is probably wondering what changes are coming. That uncertainty is a recruiting opportunity.
Scale beyond one company at a time. Manual company page research works well for targeted searches, but it doesn't scale when you're sourcing across dozens of organizations simultaneously. AI sourcing tools like Pin scan 850M+ candidate profiles across LinkedIn and 100+ other data sources at once. Instead of researching one company page, mapping its org chart, and crafting individual messages, Pin identifies matching candidates across your entire target company list and automates multi-channel outreach. As recruiter Nick Poloni put it: "The sourcing data is incredible, scanning 850M+ profiles with recruiter-level precision to uncover perfect-fit candidates I'd never find otherwise."
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the fastest way to find a company's LinkedIn page?
Type the company name into LinkedIn's search bar and click the "Companies" filter tab. This works for roughly 80% of lookups. If the name is generic or returns too many results, use Google X-ray search with site:linkedin.com/company "Company Name" to narrow results. LinkedIn hosts 69M+ company pages as of 2026 (DemandSage), so disambiguation is often necessary for common names.
How do I find a company's LinkedIn numeric ID?
Navigate to the company page, click "See all employees" or "See all jobs," and check the resulting URL. It contains a parameter like f_C=12345678 - that number is the permanent company ID. Access the page directly at linkedin.com/company/12345678/. Numeric IDs never change, even when companies rebrand or update their URL slug.
How do I find a company's LinkedIn page if I only have their website URL?
Check the company's website footer for a LinkedIn icon or "Follow us" link - many companies link directly to their page. If that's not visible, try Google: site:linkedin.com/company "companywebsite.com". This works because company pages often include the website URL in their description. As a fallback, identify an employee at that domain using an email finder tool, then follow the employer link on their LinkedIn profile.
What information can recruiters get from a LinkedIn company page for free?
Free accounts see employee count, industry, job postings, and the employee directory with basic filters. LinkedIn Recruiter and Premium subscribers additionally access headcount growth by function, new hire velocity, job function distribution, and total open roles by seniority - data sourced from LinkedIn Talent Insights' 12B+ data points (LinkedIn Help, 2025). The People tab is the most valuable for sourcing: filter employees by department, title, location, and tenure.
Finding the Page Is Step One
Five methods, one goal: getting to the company's LinkedIn page quickly so you can start extracting sourcing intelligence. Start with direct LinkedIn search. Fall back to Google X-ray when names are generic. Try URL construction for well-known companies. Use the numeric ID method when you need permanent links or API integration. And when nothing else works, find one employee and follow the link to their employer.
The company page itself is just the front door. What matters is what you do once you're there - mapping teams, spotting hiring signals, and timing your outreach for maximum impact. Manual research works for a handful of companies, but recruiters sourcing at scale need tools that handle the discovery and intelligence-gathering automatically.