I Fixed 100 404s. Traffic Barely Moved.Then I Checked the Data.
I was staring at a crawl report showing 100+ 404 errors feeling like I'd found the smoking gun. Pages that didn't exist anymore, broken links everywhere.
I fixed them all, redirected the orphans, cleaned up the mess. Three weeks later, traffic was flat.
That's when I realized something: not all 404s matter equally.
The ones that mattered were the pages getting actual traffic or backlinks before they broke. A 404 on a page nobody visited?
It's noise. A 404 on a page linked from Reddit or cited in your own internal navigation?
That's the one eating your rankings. com/business/answer/7091) makes this clear, but the data is what convinced me.
I pulled my access logs and found that about 15 of those 100 errors were actually generating impressions or clicks.
com/business) show you exactly which broken pages are appearing in search results. Fix those first.
The rest can wait until you have time.
Worth trying: Pull your 404 report from Search Console and sort by impressions. Fix the top 5 first. Those are your actual problems.
