With Links, you can turn long URLs into branded, trackable short links and QR codes. Short, branded links are easy to read, remember, and share. Because they look polished and legitimate, they can help people feel confident clicking, which can lead to higher click-through rates.
Some examples include:
LinkedIn Post: Share a link to a case study, report, or announcement in a post, giving it a professional, trustworthy appearance that encourages clicks.
Calendly Link: Share a booking link for scheduling demos, making it simple for customers to book time without extra steps.
Business Cards or Flyers: Include a QR code that customers can scan to instantly access your website, product guide, or registration page, bridging offline and online interactions.
Instagram Caption or Bio: Add a branded, trackable link to your bio or post caption. Short, easy-to-read links are simpler for viewers to click or remember.
What is a Short Link?
A short link is a condensed version of a long URL.
How Do Links Work?
Creating and sharing a short link is simple:
Turn a long link into a short one.
Copy it and paste it anywhere
Optional: Generate a QR code for printed or offline campaigns.
Your short link automatically:
Redirects visitors to the destination URL.
Tracks engagement.
Navigating Your Links Page
Your Links page displays a simple table. Each row represents a link with:
Name – The internal name of your link; it won’t be shown to customers.
Destination URL – The long link; the page you want people to land on.
Short Link – Your branded, trackable link.
Owner – The employee who sees the link in their Employee Hub and receives email notifications. All admins can manage every link and assign one owner.
The person who creates a link is automatically the link owner unless an admin changes it.
Clicks – How many people have clicked or scanned your link.
Created at – When the link was created.
Finding your links
When your list of links gets long, these tools make it easier to find what you need or organize the table.
Search: Enter part of a link’s name in the search bar to find it quickly.
Sort: Click any column title to reorder the table. For example, sort by Created at to see your oldest links first, or by Clicks to view your most popular ones. By default, links are sorted from newest to oldest.