Webflow Integration

Deadline Funnel adds genuine, per-user countdown timers and expiring offers to your Webflow landing pages and sales funnels

Unlike fake timers that reset on page refresh, Deadline Funnel tracks each visitor's unique deadline server-side, so when the timer hits zero the offer genuinely expires

This creates authentic urgency that converts significantly better than static countdowns and builds trust because returning visitors see the same consistent deadline they saw on their first visit

The integration is a direct revenue driver for Webflow e-commerce sites, course launches, and SaaS landing pages

You can set up evergreen deadlines (each visitor gets their own countdown starting from first page view) or fixed-deadline campaigns (everyone sees the same expiry date for a launch)

Deadline Funnel also handles email follow-ups synced to each user's timer, sending automated reminders as the deadline approaches

This turns your Webflow site into a coordinated urgency engine where every touchpoint -- page, email, and checkout -- reinforces the same deadline

Technically, Deadline Funnel provides a JavaScript snippet you embed in your Webflow site's custom code area, plus a REST API for programmatic control

The snippet renders countdown timers, floating bars, and inline deadlines that are cookie-based and server-verified

You can trigger deadlines based on page views, form submissions, or API calls, and Deadline Funnel automatically handles the logic of starting, pausing, and expiring timers

For Webflow e-commerce integrations, you can use the API to validate deadlines at checkout, ensuring customers can't access expired offers by manipulating the frontend.

null FAQs

Common questions about using null with Webflow.

A simple JavaScript timer resets every time the page refreshes or the user opens a new browser, making it easy to bypass Deadline Funnel stores each visitor's deadline server-side and tracks it via a cookie, so the deadline persists across sessions, devices, and page refreshes This authenticity means visitors can't game the system, which preserves the integrity of your offers and typically produces higher conversion rates than fake urgency tactics.

Yes, you configure which pages display timers through Deadline Funnel's campaign settings You can show a countdown on your sales page, hide it on your blog, and display a different floating bar on your checkout page The JavaScript snippet automatically detects the current page URL and applies the rules you've configured in your Deadline Funnel dashboard.

For Webflow e-commerce stores, you can use Deadline Funnel's API to validate whether a customer's deadline is still active before processing their order If the deadline has expired, you can redirect them to a different offer or show an upsell The API call happens server-side via a middleware function, so customers can't bypass deadline checks by manipulating frontend JavaScript.

Deadline Funnel redirects expired users to a page you specify, typically a 'sorry, this offer has ended' page or an alternative offer page You can also trigger automated email sequences that follow up with expired leads All of this is configurable per campaign, so you can A/B test different expired-user flows to see what generates the most conversions or recaptures the most lost leads.

Yes, Deadline Funnel supports authenticated deadlines where timers are tied to a user account rather than a cookie When a logged-in Webflow Memberships user accesses a gated page, you can pass their user ID to Deadline Funnel's API to fetch their specific deadline This means a user who logs in from their phone sees the same remaining time they saw on their laptop, creating a seamless cross-device urgency experience.

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