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EclusiveLink

For business and brands

Link in Bio for Business That Sells, Tracks, and Reports

Your company gets one link on every social profile. ExclusiveLink makes that link accountable: UTM support, per-link click and revenue reporting, CSV export for reconciliation, your own domain from the Pro plan, team seats on Studio, and no platform branding on any plan. From $19 per month.

Gated and paid links on every plan. No platform branding, ever.

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The short answer

The best link in bio for a business is the one that measures revenue, not just taps. A business link in bio tool should carry UTM parameters through every click, report clicks and revenue per link with country and device detail, export to CSV so finance can reconcile the numbers against ad spend, run on your own domain (for example links.yourcompany.com), and show no other company's logo on your page.

ExclusiveLink is built to that spec. Plans run $19, $49 and $149 per month (Creator, Pro and Studio, with Enterprise invoiced), custom domains are included from Pro, team seats and roles arrive on Studio, and the platform fee is 0% on Pro and above. There is no free tier and no ExclusiveLink badge on any page, on any plan.

It also sells. Any link on the page can be gated behind an email capture or priced and paid for on the spot, which turns the bio link from a signpost into the last step of a funnel you can actually report on.

Last updated July 2026

01Why business pages fail

A company bio link breaks for different reasons than a creator's

Nobody at a business is worried about vibes. They are worried about a channel that spends money and reports nothing back.

The one untracked step

Everything upstream of the bio link is instrumented. Ad spend, impressions, saves, follows: all of it lands in a dashboard. Then the visitor taps a link in a bio, the tracking stops, and the sale shows up in your revenue report as "direct." That is the single blind spot between social budget and money in the bank.

Borrowed branding

A company page carrying another platform's logo, a shared domain and an upsell footer reads as temporary. Customers who were about to book, buy or request a quote now have one more reason to hesitate, and the reason is a badge you never chose to put there.

One login, five people

The password sits in a shared doc because the coordinator has to swap a campaign link on Thursday and the founder owns the account. It works until someone leaves, or until two people edit the same page an hour before a launch.

02Attribution

Close the gap between social spend and revenue

Every link on an ExclusiveLink page can carry UTM parameters, so the click that starts on a paid Reel arrives in your analytics tagged as a paid Reel. Source, medium and campaign travel with the visitor instead of evaporating at the tap. That is the whole trick, and it is the piece a plain list of links never does.

Underneath it, the reporting is per link rather than per page: clicks and revenue by day, by country, by device, by source. When a link is gated or priced, the sale is recorded on the page itself, so revenue attaches to the exact link that earned it rather than to a guess. Export the CSV, hand it to whoever owns the spreadsheet, and let them reconcile it against ad spend line by line.

The worked example beside this is hypothetical, but the arithmetic is the arithmetic. A boutique fitness studio with 12,000 followers runs a $39 intro pass as a paid link and a free class guide behind an email gate.

Hypothetical: one month, one bio link

Bio link clicks (all UTM tagged)3,400
Emails captured on the gated guide410
Intro passes sold at $3952
Gross revenue$2,028
Stripe processing (2.9% + $0.30)-$74
ExclusiveLink Pro-$49
Platform fee on the salesNone
Kept by the business$1,905

Illustrative figures, not a customer result. Stripe's card processing applies on every platform, including ours.

Revenue per link, not clicks per page

A page total tells you the channel is alive. A per-link number tells you the webinar link earned and the careers link did not, which is the difference between reporting and deciding.

Geo and device breakdowns

See which countries and which devices convert before you widen the targeting on a campaign. A page that sells on desktop in one market and stalls on mobile in another is telling you where the budget should go.

Exportable CSV

Clicks and revenue export to CSV, so the numbers can live in your own model next to ad spend, CAC and every other line the finance team already trusts. No screenshots of a dashboard in a monthly deck.

03Brand and team

Your domain, your logo, your people

Two things separate a company page from a hobby page: whose name is on it, and how many people can safely touch it.

Custom domain from Pro

Run the page on links.yourcompany.com instead of a shared platform URL. Same brand, same trust, same domain your customers already recognize from your email footer. Included on Pro at $49 per month and on every plan above it.

Zero platform branding, every plan

No badge, no footer credit, no "make your own page" banner at the bottom of your storefront. Not on the entry plan, not ever. Your page advertises your business and nobody else's.

Seats and roles on Studio

Studio is $149 per month ($119 annual) with 3 seats and up to 10 pages, so a marketing coordinator can update a campaign link under their own account while the founder keeps ownership. Enterprise adds SSO/SAML, custom roles, a DPA and invoicing.

Ten pages on Studio is usually enough to give each brand, region or campaign its own page while keeping the reporting in one account. Setup takes a single DNS record, and the walkthrough lives on the custom domain link in bio page. If you buy software for other people's brands rather than your own, the link in bio for agencies page covers client work and multi-account setups.

Procurement will ask about the rest: data processing, single sign-on, where the data sits. Those answers are on the security and data page, and Enterprise contracts are invoiced rather than charged to a founder's card.

04Selling

Capture the lead or take the payment, on the page

A business link in bio should end with an action, not a redirect to a redirect.

Gated links capture leads

Put the pricing sheet, the benchmark report or the class guide behind an email gate. The visitor gets the asset immediately, you get a named lead instead of an anonymous click, and the capture rate is a number you can watch weekly.

Paid links sell directly

Price a link and the payment happens on your page: an intro pass, a workshop seat, a deposit, a digital product. Links can be scheduled or set to expire, which is what a drop, a restock or an early bird window actually needs.

0% platform fee on Pro and above

We take 2% on the $19 Creator plan and nothing at all on Pro and above. Stripe's card processing (2.9% + $0.30) still applies, as it does on every platform that accepts cards, including this one. We would rather say so than hide it.

Percentages read as rounding errors until you multiply them by a year of revenue. A business doing $8,000 a month through the page pays $0 in platform fees on Pro and $960 a year in platform fees on a 1% take. Full plan detail sits on the link in bio pricing page.

05By business type

What the link is actually for

The right page depends on what one visitor is worth to you, and how quickly you can ask for something.

Local service business

Booking link first, quote request second, lead magnet third. A plumber, a dentist or a studio wants the appointment, and the email gate on a "what a fair quote looks like" guide keeps the visitors who were not ready today.

Ecommerce brand

Drops, restocks and the product from yesterday's post, each on a scheduled link that goes live and expires on its own. UTM tags on every link tell you whether the drop sold because of the Reel or because of the email.

B2B and SaaS

Webinar registration, demo booking, and the gated benchmark report that earns the email address your sales team will actually work. Per-link reporting shows which social post fed the pipeline instead of which post got applause.

Restaurant and hospitality

Menu, reservations, private hire enquiry, gift cards. Seasonal menus can be scheduled to appear and retire on the right dates, and a paid link sells the supper club seats without a separate ticketing tool.

Professional services

A consultancy, a law firm or an accountant sells credibility before it sells hours: a paid workshop, a gated template, a consultation booking. The page carries your domain, which matters more here than anywhere.

One link, every platform

The same page sits in the Instagram bio, the TikTok profile, the YouTube description and the email signature, tagged differently in each so the reporting stays clean. Platform specifics are on the link in bio for Instagram page.

06Side by side

What a business actually pays

Prices and fees checked in July 2026. We list what we can verify and nothing else.

What a business needs ExclusiveLink Linktree Beacons Stan Store
Monthly plans$19, $49, $149, Enterprise invoicedFree, $8, $15, $35Free, $10, $30, $90$29, $99
Annual price of the plan we recommendPro at $39/mo billed annuallyVaries by tierVaries by tierVaries by tier
Platform fee on your sales0% on Pro and above, 2% on Creator12% on Free, 9% on Pro, 0% only on Premium9% on the lower tiersNo platform fee
Stripe card processing2.9% + $0.302.9% + $0.302.9% + $0.302.9% + $0.30
Free tierNone, by designYesYesNo

Card processing is the same everywhere, because it belongs to Stripe rather than to the platform. The number that moves is the platform fee stacked on top of it, and on a business doing real volume through the page, a 9% or 12% cut is the whole argument.

On the ExclusiveLink side of the table: custom domains from Pro, no platform branding on any plan, per-link clicks and revenue with UTM, geo and device, CSV export, and 3 seats with up to 10 pages on Studio. We have not filled in those rows for the other three, because we would be guessing at terms that change, and a guess in a comparison table is worth less than nothing.

07FAQ

Questions business buyers ask first

What is a link in bio for business?

A link in bio for business is the single clickable URL on a company's social profile, pointing to a page that routes visitors to bookings, products, lead magnets or contact. For a business it has to do more than list links: it needs UTM tracking, revenue reporting, brand control and team access, so marketing can prove what the channel returns.

Can I use my own domain for my business link in bio?

Yes. Custom domains are included from the Pro plan at $49 per month ($39 billed annually), so the page runs at links.yourcompany.com rather than a shared platform URL. You point one DNS record at us and the certificate is issued for you. No plan carries ExclusiveLink branding, on your domain or on ours.

How do I track sales from my Instagram bio link?

Tag the links on your page with UTM parameters, then read the per-link report: clicks and revenue by day, country and device. Gated and paid links record the action on the page itself, so a sale attaches to the exact link that earned it. Export the CSV and reconcile it against your ad spend.

Can multiple team members manage the same link in bio?

Yes, on the Studio plan at $149 per month ($119 billed annually), which includes 3 seats and up to 10 pages. Everyone signs in with their own account and role, so a marketing coordinator can swap a campaign link without a shared password. Enterprise adds SSO/SAML, roles, a DPA and invoicing.

Is a link in bio worth it for a small business?

It is worth it when the link has a job: a booking, a quote request, an email capture, a sale. ExclusiveLink starts at $19 per month (Creator, $15 billed annually) with a 2% fee, and Pro at $49 removes the platform fee entirely. If the page books one extra job a month, the math has already settled itself.

Make the link accountable

Stop guessing what your social profile is worth.

Build the page, tag the links, put it on your own domain, and report the number at the next marketing meeting.