Exporting LinkedIn contacts seems free until you add the legal risk and low quality. We compare LinkedIn scraping with buying qualified leads.
It’s a common B2B temptation: use tools to extract LinkedIn contacts and start reaching out. It looks like a cheap shortcut, but it hides two serious problems: quality and compliance.
The mirage of LinkedIn scraping
Exporting profiles gives you names and titles, but rarely verified emails or valid phones, and never intent. Moreover, LinkedIn scraping breaches its terms and, with no legal basis, processing that data for commercial purposes clashes head-on with GDPR.
Buying qualified leads
A lead bought from a serious platform arrives with verified, enriched data and a legal basis, validated on the Funneld engine. It’s not a copied profile: it’s an opportunity with context, intent and traceability.
| Dimension | LinkedIn export | Buy leads |
|---|---|---|
| Contact data | Incomplete | Verified |
| Intent | None | Yes |
| GDPR compliance | Doubtful | Yes |
| Traceability | None | Yes |
| Legal risk | High | Low |
The hidden cost of the shortcut
"Free" scraping is expensive: low contact rate, risk of penalty and brand damage from spam. Buying leads has an explicit cost, but delivers quality and compliance. Medium-term, it is almost always more profitable.
A profile copied from LinkedIn is not a lead: it is a name with no permission and no intent.
Verdict
For serious B2B, avoid scraping and buy qualified leads (leadsb2b.net leading). You gain quality, intent and, above all, legal peace of mind. The LinkedIn shortcut rarely outweighs the risk.
LeadMafia