Build a Cyber Monday page. [X] hours only, up to [X%] off. Make it feel electric and urgent.
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Build a Cyber Monday page: neon-electric hero with "24 HOURS · UP TO 60% OFF", live countdown to midnight, sale grid with strikethrough pricing, last-chance shipping callout, and "wait list for next sale" email capture for post-sale leads.
- 24-hour countdown with second-precision tick.
- Neon urgency design distinct from Black Friday.
- Post-sale email capture for the next event.
- Auto-expires at midnight with 'sale ended' state.
Sections this page should include
- High-urgency hero with 24-hour countdown
- Sale grid with strikethrough pricing + tiered discount messaging
- Last-chance shipping callout for guaranteed Christmas arrival
- Mystery box / bonus offer for higher AOV
- Trust signals + customer reviews
- Post-sale email capture for the next campaign
What you're trying to do
Cyber Monday is its own beast — shoppers expect deeper discounts than Black Friday and the urgency is compressed to 24 hours. A separate landing page (not a recycled BFCM page) signals 'this is the real deal' and converts the most price-sensitive cohort of the year.
Things to watch out for
- Distinct from BFCM — Fudge handles this: different visual language, deeper discounts, tighter window.
- Expired state — Fudge writes a 'see you next year' fallback.
- Inventory — Fudge flags low-stock SKUs so you don't oversell.
- Mobile — Fudge calibrates to 70%+ of Cyber Monday traffic is mobile.
How Fudge does it
Fudge duplicates your live theme into a draft, builds a custom page template with the sections and logic your prompt requires, and populates it with your real products, pricing, and brand styling. Everything starts in draft — you preview before publishing, tweak any section, and your live store stays untouched until you're ready.
Building a Cyber Monday page that survives BFCM bleed
Cyber Monday is the digital tail of Black Friday. Most brands run Cyber Monday as an extension of BFCM (same products, same offer), which leaves money on the table. The winning move is to treat Cyber Monday as a distinct campaign with its own creative, its own offer structure, and its own urgency angle — usually deeper discounts on a tighter window.
When this page is worth building
Build a dedicated Cyber Monday page if BFCM is meaningful to your store. The traffic this Monday is uniquely high-intent — these are shoppers who already saw something during BFCM but didn’t buy. A dedicated page with a fresh angle captures them.
Skip the dedicated page only if BFCM didn’t perform for you (it doesn’t fit every category). In that case, just point BFCM traffic to a flat sale and skip Cyber Monday as a separate moment.
What makes one great
- Bold visual differentiation from BFCM — neon, electric, urgent. The visual cue tells returning shoppers “this is a new offer, not the same as Friday.”
- 24-hour countdown — Cyber Monday is the tightest urgency window of the year. The countdown should be visually prominent and tick by the second.
- Deeper discount on bestsellers — if BFCM was 25% off, Cyber Monday should be 30–40% off on a curated subset. The differential is what drives the second purchase.
- Last-chance shipping callout — Cyber Monday is the last reasonable order date for guaranteed pre-Christmas delivery. Make this explicit.
Common mistakes to avoid
The biggest Cyber Monday mistake is running the exact same offer as BFCM. Returning shoppers see no reason to convert this time. Fresh offer + fresh creative = a second shot at conversion.
The second mistake is post-sale email capture neglect. Most Cyber Monday traffic that doesn’t convert today won’t convert this week — but they’re a great list for the next campaign. A modest email capture (“Be first for next sale”) at the bottom of the page is high-value.
Pair this with a BFCM landing page — separate URLs, but funnel the bounced BFCM traffic to Cyber Monday with an email capture in between.