Scrapebox comments – How to let your comments stick?

Scrapebox comments

How to let your Scrapebox comments stick?

Your comment stick rate (the likelihood of your comment “sticking” to a certain post you are commenting on) is a very important concept. Many do a fantastic job harvesting a great list of blogs/websites, filtering out low PR resources, preparing their campaign, etc. only to mess it up with a badly formatted comment. Here are some general guidelines to increase your stick rate.

Uniqueness of Scrapebox comments

First of all, you need to make it absolutely certain that your Scrapebox comments (or all comments for that matter) are unique. This ensures reduction of your footprint (Google or other search engines won?t be able to “track” you down). So how do you make your comments unique? Spinning of course! Scrapebox allows you to spin your comments, using a simple spin-syntax.

{Hey there|Hello|Good day}, {dear sir|fellow|friend}, {nice|great|fantastic} site! will, for example turn into “Hey there, dear sir, nice site!”
Scrapebox allows you to spin words, sentences and complete paragraphs. Make good use of all! Try to spin words as well as complete sentences. Prepare around 4-5 different, very well spun comments. They can be of varying length. One-four sentences is usually enough to ensure optimal length.

Tip: Consider investing into spinning tools and other such software. A one time investment will save you a lot of money and energy while ensuring your comment’s uniqueness in the long run. Check out our Appendix section for some recommendations.

Content

What exactly should your comment be about? Good question. Don?t make the rookie mistake and go about commenting on how great of a site, which you are leaving a comment on, is. So avoid comments that sound something like this:

Wow, great site! I really enjoyed the content! Please keep on writing about this content, I will be subscribing next! Check out my site here http://yourlink.com

These comments do not look natural and their stick rate is rather poor (below 30%). On another whole different level, Google (or other search engines) do not like these comments at all. This is due to your link appearing amongst unrelated keywords. So, avoid these kinds of comments at all cost.

In our Scrapebox guide we dive into what kind of comments you can write and how to not leave a footprint.

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