I am looking at my traffic data for users that have 'not found' in the page title, which is what is title
content when the server uses the 404 template. In analytics: behavior > site content > all pages
, set page title
as primary dimension
and add filter to only include the not found
page titles.
I'm looking at one row in particular; I have 54 pageviews
on this 404 page. Let's say we are looking at www.domain.com/page/path/level
. If I add a secondary dimension
of source/medium
I see that all 54 hits are google/organic
. So that brings me to my first question:
Question 1. Does the source/medium
value of google/organic
mean that this exact page (www.domain.com/page/path/level
) was listed in a google SERP and that is how users landed on this page? Or does it just mean that user session started from a google SERP, but then they navigated to a 404?
If I change the secondary dimension
to previous page path
I see that 38 out of my 54 pageviews have (entrance)
as the value. If I change the secondary dimension
to landing page
, 52 of the pageviews have the same domain (www.domain.com/page/path/level
) as the landing page.
Question 2. How does the value in previous page path
of (entrance)
differ from the landing page
of a page being itself (i.e. landing page for www.domain.com/page/path/level
is www.domain.com/page/path/level
, meaning... it landed on itself(?) )?
In google search console (previously webmaster tools)
when I search the analytics of my domain I don't see the path path of the 404 that I see in google analytics
. For example, I can filter the pages of my domain to find a similar path like www.domain.com/page/a/somewhat/different/path/level
.
Question 3. Why is that? If any traffic is listed as google/organic
or as landing on itself from google, shouldn't that mean that there would be data in search console that I can see?