How to Track 404 Errors for Consultants
A decision-maker at a Fortune 500 company reads your thought leadership article, clicks through to your website to learn about your consulting services, and lands on a 404 page. They immediately think: “If they can’t maintain their website, I can’t trust them with our project.” That was a six-figure contract—gone to a broken link.
Why 404 Errors Matters for Consultants
Credibility is your currency. Clients pay you for expertise. If your website has broken links, they question your attention to detail in everything you do.
Enterprise sales are high-stakes. A single client contract can be worth tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars. One broken link during their research phase can kill an opportunity you spent weeks nurturing.
Case studies disappear. Your best work lives in case studies and past projects. When those pages break, so does your proof of competence.
Proposals get undermined. If prospects can’t verify your claims because of broken links, your credibility takes a hit right when it matters most.
How to Check in GA4
Open GA4 and create a custom exploration:
- Go to Reports > Explore
- Click Blank exploration
- Add Page location as a dimension
- Add Page views as a metric
- Add a filter: Page location contains “404”
- Check which broken pages get the most traffic
Set up weekly automated reports to catch new errors.
The Easier Way
You didn’t become a consultant to become a website administrator. Your expertise is solving business problems—not tracking broken links.
ClawAnalytics gives you a simple 404 overview. You’ll see clear answers to:
- Which service pages have broken links?
- Are prospects hitting 404s when trying to view my case studies?
- Did my recent site update create any broken pages?
We alert you the moment a new 404 appears, so you can fix it before it costs you your next big contract. No GA4 expertise needed.
Quick Wins
Test every link before proposals. Before you send any proposal or case study, verify every link works.
Redirect retired services. When you retire an offering, redirect to a similar active service instead of deleting the page.
Audit quarterly. Set a calendar reminder to check your entire site for broken links every three months.
Keep case studies live. Your best work should always be accessible. Never delete case study pages—just redirect if you must.
Your consulting work helps businesses grow. Make sure your website doesn’t tell a different story.