How to Track 404 Errors for Furniture Stores
A customer clicks on a Google search result for that sectional sofa you advertised. The page loads, but it says “Page Not Found.” They close the tab and look elsewhere. That lost sale started with a 404 error.
Why 404 Errors Matter for Furniture Stores
Furniture products have long lifecycles. A popular dining table might be discontinued after a year. Every time you remove a product, you risk leaving behind broken links that point to deleted pages.
High-value items mean higher stakes. Furniture is an investment. Customers research extensively before buying. When they encounter a 404 error, they question whether your store is trustworthy enough to make a major purchase from.
Seasonal collections create dead ends. Many furniture stores rotate collections seasonally or annually. Each new collection launch requires careful redirect management or you will accumulate broken links.
Mobile traffic is vulnerable. Customers browse furniture on their phones while in your showroom or comparing prices. A broken link on mobile is especially frustrating and leads to immediate abandonment.
How to Check in GA4
Open GA4 and go to the Engagement section. Click on Pages to see your most viewed pages. In the filter box, type “404” to find error pages. Look at the Event count to see how many times each broken page was visited.
For deeper analysis, create a custom exploration. Use “Page location” as a dimension and filter for events where the event name contains “page_not_found”. This gives you a complete list of every URL producing 404 errors.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics takes the headache out of 404 tracking for furniture stores. You get a real-time feed of every broken link on your site, ranked by how much traffic each one loses you.
For instance, you might discover that your homepage still links to a sofa collection you discontinued six months ago. Or you might find that an old email campaign is sending traffic to a page that no longer exists.
ClawAnalytics prioritizes errors by impact. You see first which broken links are costing you the most lost visitors so you can fix those first.
You also get automated suggestions. If you have a popular discontinued product, ClawAnalytics might recommend redirecting to a similar item instead of letting it 404. This keeps customers engaged rather than driving them away.
Quick Wins
Set up redirects before removing pages. When a furniture line gets discontinued, immediately create redirects to similar products or your main category page.
Audit after website changes. Any time you redesign your site or update your URL structure, run a full link audit to catch broken connections.
Monitor your most linked pages. Check which product pages have the most inbound links from your own content. These are the highest-priority pages to maintain or properly redirect.
Try ClawAnalytics today. Visit ClawAnalytics.com to start tracking 404 errors automatically. Keep every potential customer from hitting a dead end.