-
Navigate to LinkedIn Learning.
-
Click
Sign in. -
Click Continue.
-
Based on your Learning license, you’ll be redirected to the correct password screen to make your sign in process easier. If you need to reset your password, or are having trouble accessing Learning through your organization, please contact your help desk directly for further assistance.
-
Tap Sign in.
-
Tap Continue in the pop-up window that appears.
-
Enter your email address.
-
Tap Continue.
-
Based on your Learning license, you’ll be redirected to the correct password screen to make your sign in process easier.
If you need to sign into LinkedIn to access Learning and you’re unable to remember your LinkedIn password, you can use a sign-in link to access your LinkedIn Learning account. Learn more about how you can obtain the one-time sign in link. (See Related tasks section below.)
-
Click your original activation link.
This may have come either via invitation email, or directly from your admin.
-
If a Connect your LinkedIn account window is presented, do the following:
- Click Continue without LinkedIn.
- Click Don’t connect my account.
-
From the Create your LinkedIn Learning account window click Already have an account?
-
Sign in with the email address and password you registered with originally.
If you don’t remember your password, you can use the Forgot your password? link.
If your organization didn’t renew their LinkedIn Learning SSO certification before March 25, 2020, please follow the steps for your IDP as soon as possible. The new certificate can be added as a secondary certificate. (See Related tasks section below.)
-
Navigate to https://your.adfsserver.com/adfs/ls/IdpInitiatedSignOn.aspx
-
Replace your.adfsserver.com with your server
Important to know
If your organization didn’t renew their LinkedIn Learning SSO certification before March 25, 2020, please follow the steps for your IDP as soon as possible. The new certificate can be added as a secondary certificate. (See Related Tasks section below.)
-
Azure AD, Okta, and OneLogin ignore the SSO certificate as long as your organization hasn't built any custom functionality to sign authentication requests.
-
IdP-initiated SAML assertions don’t check for LinkedIn Learning’s certificate, and therefore can be used to log into Learning Management and download the new metadata, if necessary.
-
The new certificate is in .pem format. If you need to convert it to a different format, you can paste the following commands into terminal. Be sure to first navigate to the location that the .pem file is stored in. For example, if you save the file to your desktop, type “cd Desktop” into terminal to navigate to the right location:
- openssl x509 -inform PEM -in samlRenewedCert2020.pem -outform DER -out samlRenewedCert2020.cer
- openssl x509 -outform der -in samlRenewedCert2020.pem -out samlRenewedCert2020.crt
-
If your account settings are Profile Required, SSO can temporarily be disabled while you work on updating the certificate. Learners should be able to access learning from their personal LinkedIn profile. Please note this is a temporary workaround, and the certificate should be updated in your IdP as soon as possible. After adding the new certificate and making a successful SP-Initiated SSO attempt, you should turn SSO back on right away.