Skip to main content

LinkedIn launches standalone personal assistant app, LinkedIn Contacts

linkedin contacts
Image used with permission by copyright holder

A personal assistant in your pocket is one way of thinking about LinkedIn’s new and third standalone app, LinkedIn Contacts, which launched today

LinkedIn is figuring quickly that the omnipresence of a mobile app can offer far more to professionals than the Web can. And for busy business-types that don’t already have an assistant, it’s always nice to have a sidekick to tell you what meeting you should be at or how you know the person you’re about to meet.

Of course, LinkedIn Contacts isn’t exactly Siri – this isn’t an AI-powered app that you can chat with that you can ask questions of; it’s more an address book with networking capabilities. LinkedIn Contacts pulls your contacts from your address book, email accounts, and calendars, and acts as a manager for all of this information. Other sources that LinkedIn pulls from include CardMunch, LinkedIn’s standalone business scanning app, Evernote, TripIt, Outlook, Yahoo, Gmail, and of course LinkedIn.

This is part of the more active approach LinkedIn has recently been taking. By making moves in becoming a mobile platform for managing your contacts, there is no doubt that time spent on the app is bound to grow. 

Once you’ve synced up your contacts, on the desktop version of the app, your email, mobile, Evernote, or whatever platform you use to save your contact’s information, everything is stored on LinkedIn. The neat thing about LinkedIn is that all of these contacts show up in one place, and the app offers a powerful filter to sort through your growing little black book. On the mobile app you can even jot down notes about them and how you met. On top of this, there’s a tab partitioned for all notes that you’ve added to your To-Do list, and another for the calendar. These tabs aren’t available on the desktop app, however.

linkedin contacts profile page
Image used with permission by copyright holder

What’s particularly useful about the app is the availability of a timeline that lists important interactions with each contact on both desktop and mobile. You’ll even find a list of the most recent emails that you can tap open inside of LinkedIn. It’s a clever reminder about how you met that person, and you don’t even have to lift a finger since the details about your relationship are aggregated automatically.

LinkedIn Contacts has a ways to go before it’ll be accepted for its intended use as a personal assistant, but it’s an interesting first step into the arena. 

Editors' Recommendations

Francis Bea
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Francis got his first taste of the tech industry in a failed attempt at a startup during his time as a student at the…
How to set your Facebook Feed to show most recent posts
A smartphone with the Facebook app icon on it all on a white marble background.

Facebook's Feed is designed to recommend content you'd most likely want to see, and it's based on your Facebook activity, your connections, and the level of engagement a given post receives.

But sometimes you just want to see the latest Facebook posts. If that's you, it's important to know that you're not just stuck with Facebook's Feed algorithm. Sorting your Facebook Feed to show the most recent posts is a simple process:

Read more
How to go live on TikTok (and can you with under 1,000 followers?)
Tik Tok

It only takes a few steps to go live on TikTok and broadcast yourself to the world:

Touch the + button at the bottom of the screen.
Press the Live option under the record button.
Come up with a title for your live stream. 
Click Go Live to begin.

Read more
Bluesky barrels toward 1 million new sign-ups in a day
Bluesky social media app logo.

Social media app Bluesky has picked nearly a million new users just a day after exiting its invitation-only beta and opening to everyone.

In a post on its main rival -- X (formerly Twitter) -- Bluesky shared a chart showing a sudden boost in usage on the app, which can now be downloaded for free for iPhone and Android devices.

Read more