A pair of lead gen providers have disappeared from LinkedIn

Two sales engagement platforms are gone from LinkedIn. Updated with comments from Apollo.io and G2.

Chat with MarTechBot

We’ve updated this article with responses from Apollo.io and G2.

LinkedIn is one of the best sources of data available for B2B sellers, but the Microsoft-owned platform is known for not making money by sharing its data. Instead, it generates revenue from advertising and premium subscription services, especially those for recruiters and sales professionals.

That hasn’t kept sales engagement platforms from using Chrome extensions to help sellers generate leads by grabbing data from LinkedIn. And that appears to be against LinkedIn’s terms of service prohibiting third-party tools from scraping LinkedIn data.

Sometime on March 6, 2025, a pair of sales engagement platforms — Apollo.io and Seamless.ai — disappeared from the LinkedIn platform. Both companies have Chrome extensions that salespeople use to take data from LinkedIn.

Apollo.io website screenshot.
A screenshot from the Apollo.io website mentioning the company’s Chrome extension for LinkedIn prospecting.

In the case of Apollo.io, the company still comes up in LinkedIn search results:

Screenshot 2025 03 07 At 12.47.40 PM 1

But click on that View Page button, and poof! Houston, we have a problem:

Screenshot 2025 03 07 At 12.47.10 PM 1

Apollo.io says it’s working with LinkedIn

In a statement sent to MarTech on Monday, March 10, 2025, Apollo.io said it is engaging with LinkedIn to find a resolution.

“We are actively working with LinkedIn to understand the nature of our brand page restriction and to resolve the matter as soon as possible,” said Tim Zheng, co-founder and CEO at Apollo.io.

Zheng’s statement also said Apollo’s removal from LinkedIn “does not disrupt Apollo’s services or impact our core platform functionality.”

Apollo.io will issue updates on the situation via its Slack community.

G2’s coverage disappears from its website

One of the first websites to publish about the disappearance of Apollo and Seamless from LinkedIn was G2, which is more widely known for its software reviews than news coverage.

G2’s Sudipto Paul published an article on the situation, which was later edited and eventually removed from G2’s site sometime after March 7, 2025.

MarTech reached out to Jenny Gardynski, senior director of content and communication at G2, to ask about the article’s removal.

“An editorial decision was made to remove this particular piece,” Gardynski said via a LinkedIn message. “That said, our team at G2 will continue to cover trending topics in the software world and we hope to be a resource for you in the future!”

Both Seamless and Apollo recently posted about the recognition they garnered in G2’s 2025 Best Software Awards.

Meanwhile, Clark Barron, a well-known B2B marketing personality on LinkedIn, published a thorough analysis of the situation:

This wouldn’t be the first time LinkedIn took action against companies trying to get at its data (if that’s what happened). In 2022, a LinkedIn lawsuit led to the shutdown of Singapore-based company Mantheos Ptd. Ltd. LinkedIn lost a case against hiQ Labs, which is still making its way through the appeals process.

Email:


About the author

Mike Pastore
Staff
Mike Pastore has spent nearly three decades in B2B marketing, as an editor, writer, and marketer. He first wrote about marketing in 1998 for internet.com (later Jupitermedia). He then worked with marketers at some of the best-known brands in B2B tech creating content for marketing campaigns at both Jupitermedia and QuinStreet. Prior to joining Third Door Media as the Editorial Director of the MarTech website, he led demand generation at B2B media company TechnologyAdvice.

Fuel up with free marketing insights.