How to Track 404 Errors for Photographers
Imagine a bride-to-be finds your photography website through a Pinterest pin. She clicks to see your wedding portfolio, but instead of beautiful images, she sees a “Page Not Found” error. She’s gone in seconds, probably to one of your competitors. That lost lead could have been a $3,000 wedding photography booking.
Why 404 Errors Matter for Photographers
Lost Revenue Opportunities: Every broken link is a potential client who bounces and never comes back. Wedding photographers alone can lose thousands per inquiry.
Damaged Reputation: A website full of errors makes you look unprofessional. Clients expect their photographers to be detail-oriented.
SEO Ranking Damage: Google penalizes sites with excessive 404 errors. Your site becomes harder to find in search results.
Wasted Ad Spend: If you’re running ads driving traffic to broken pages, that budget is completely wasted.
How to Check in GA4
First, log into Google Analytics 4 and go to the Reports section. Look for “Crashes and Errors” under the Engagement menu. This shows you how many users encountered errors on your site.
For more details, create a custom exploration. Set the dimension to “Page Path” and filter for pages containing “404” or check your error page views. Look at the “Views” metric to see how many times users hit dead ends.
Check this report weekly. Pay attention to which pages have the most 404 errors and where users are coming from when they hit them.
The Easier Way
Most photographers don’t have time to dig through GA4 reports every week. That’s where ClawAnalytics helps.
ClawAnalytics automatically monitors your site for 404 errors and alerts you in real-time. For photographers, it specifically tracks errors on key pages like your portfolio, pricing, and contact pages.
Example questions ClawAnalytics can answer:
- Which of my portfolio pages has the most broken links this week?
- Did any pricing page links break after my last website update?
- Where are users coming from when they hit 404 errors?
Instead of manually checking GA4, you get a simple weekly Discord message showing exactly what needs fixing. No technical knowledge required.
Quick Wins
Audit Your Links Monthly: Go through your main pages and test every link. Fix any that lead to errors.
Set Up Custom 404 Pages: When users hit a dead end, show them your best work and a clear way to contact you. Don’t just display “Page Not Found.”
Use Redirects When Updating URLs: If you change your page URLs, create 301 redirects so old links still work.
Track Where Errors Come From: Check which external sites link to your pages. Reach out to blog posts or wedding vendors linking to you and ask them to update broken links.
Start checking your 404 errors this week. Your next booking might depend on it.