The LinkedIn tab of each Sender Profile is packed with signals that tell you how safe, healthy, and productive the account is. This article walks through every metric on the page in the order you see it — top cards, activity summary, the Daily Activity chart, and the KPI row underneath.
Top dashboard cards
Account Health
A single 0–100 score that summarizes the safety of the underlying LinkedIn account, plus a short advisory message (e.g., Keep it up! or Check 1 metric to improve sender effectiveness).
Click View details to open the Account Health modal, which has two panels:
Radar chart across six axes:
Active Sessions — are there multiple concurrent sessions or IP changes that could raise red flags?
Profile Age & Network Size — is the account mature enough, with a reasonable network?
Reply Rate & Block Rate — how many replies do your messages get, and how often are they blocked?
Last Month Activity — was activity in the last month consistent and plausible?
Connect Rate & Withdrawal Queue — what share of connection requests are accepted, and is your pending queue healthy?
Verification & Account Completeness — is the profile filled out and verified?
Recommendations — a line-by-line breakdown per axis with a green check when the axis looks good and an orange warning when it needs attention. Typical lines you'll see:
Your account has a good age (over 12 months).
Your network size is over 500 connections — well done.
Consider obtaining verification to enhance your account's credibility.
Excellent! Your connection conversion rate exceeds 30%.
For the full methodology behind Account Health, see Understanding LinkedIn Account Health: Key Metrics & Their Impact.
Your Daily Connections Limit vs Market
A market benchmark for your current connection-requests cap.
A dot on the bar marks your sender. Use this card to sanity-check whether your limit is conservative, typical, or aggressive relative to peers. If you're well below the market median and your Account Health is strong, there's usually room to grow.
Your cap — the daily connection-requests ceiling currently applied to this sender.
Delta vs market — how your cap compares to the market median, shown as a percentage with an up/down arrow (e.g., 17% above market median).
Benchmark bar — a horizontal bar positioning your value relative to:
Market median — the median cap across comparable senders.
Top 25 — senders in the top 25th percentile.
Warmup Level
A five-tier progression that AI Warmup uses to decide how fast it's safe to ramp your daily caps. The card shows your current tier (e.g., Getting Warm), Current actions / month, and the Next level actions / month threshold.
Tap View details for the full ladder. Full mechanics, including how tiers map to daily-limit growth, are covered in AI Warmup Guide.
Activity summary cards
Three compact cards give you today's progress for the most common outreach actions:
Send Connection Request — Done today: X of Y · Total scheduled: Z
Send InMail — Done today: X of Y · Total scheduled: Z
Send Message — Done today: X of Y · Total scheduled: Z
Done today — completed actions over today's effective daily limit (the Daily limit column in the per-task table).
Total scheduled — everything currently queued for this sender across all automations. A growing backlog here means automations are producing work faster than the sender can execute it under its limits.
Daily Activity vs LinkedIn Limits (chart)
A weekly histogram of your actual volume against your caps and the market. This is the single most useful chart on the page.
Toggle
Switch the entire chart between Connection Requests and InMails. The selected action type determines what the bars and reference lines represent.
Legend
Connection Requests (or InMails) — your actual volume per day (the bar height).
Daily Limit — the effective cap GetSales applied that day (the cap your bars should not exceed).
LinkedIn Limit — LinkedIn's own ceiling for that action type if applied.
Market Median — median daily volume across comparable senders, for context.
KPI row (below the chart)
Four at-a-glance metrics summarize the current period.
LinkedIn Limit Hit
This shows how many times LinkedIn officially warned the account or paused sending due to weekly/daily limits. Frequent hits decrease your Account Health and increase the risk of a temporary ban.
Safety Buffer
How much of your daily connection-requests limit you are not using, averaged over the last 31 days. It is calculated only for connection requests (not messages or profile visits).
Example: your daily limit is 25 connection requests, and you have sent 500 in the last 31 days — that averages to about 16 per day, leaving roughly 36% of your cap unused. Your Safety Buffer is ~36%.
How to read it: - High (> 30%) — well below the limit. Safe to increase load or warm up faster. - Low (< 10%) — running close to the limit. Elevated risk of a shadow ban. - 0% or negative — regularly hitting (or exceeding) the limit.
Relationship to warm-up: while AI Warmup is active and your current limit is still below your Target daily limit, Safety Buffer will naturally sit high — that is intended. The system deliberately keeps volume under the cap while the account ramps.
Network Growth
Net new connections gained in the period, shown as +X connections. A healthy, growing sender should see this number climb steadily.
Acceptance Rate
The share of connection requests that were accepted in the period (e.g., 81%), with an up/down arrow versus the previous period.
> 30% — strong targeting and messaging.
10–30% — average. Room to iterate on targeting, subject lines, and personalization.
< 10% — audience or copy mismatch. Expect LinkedIn to notice: both Account Health (Connect Rate axis) and risk of flagging will suffer.
Using the metrics together
A practical cheat sheet for common situations:
Account Health 90+, Safety Buffer > 30%, Acceptance Rate > 30% — you can safely raise your Target daily limits or shorten Delay between tasks.
Account Health dropping, Acceptance Rate falling — pause new outreach, review your ICP and templates, and let AI Warmup recover pacing.
LinkedIn Limit Hit trending up, Safety Buffer low — pull Target daily limits down one notch and wait a week before pushing again.
Network Growth flat but volume high — you're sending plenty, but not converting. Fix messaging before raising limits further.
Related articles
Sender Profiles — overview of the page and tabs.
AI Warmup Guide — how AI Warmup ramps your daily caps and how to set Target daily limits.









