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10h11's Bold Return to Red: Embracing Brand Essentials

10h11 is embracing its original bold, red visual identity after years of experimentation. This strategic move back to the brand's core essentials is designed to grab attention and embody the fighting spirit of the young data-driven team.

June 19, 2025
3min
10h11's Bold Return to Red: Embracing Brand Essentials

Fourteen years ago, 10h11 entered the digital scene with a bold visual identity: red, white, and black. A deliberately striking palette — red like a matador’s cape — designed to grab attention and embody the fighting spirit of a young team passionate about data. Since then, the company has grown, opened a branch in Canada, launched countless projects… and experimented with many colors: "institutional" shades to appear more mature, pastels to soften the tone, monochrome variations to play it sober.

But after all this exploration, one thing became clear: a brand identity must reflect what the company truly is, not what it thinks it should look like. Today, 10h11 proudly returns to its original colors and a streamlined navigation experience, with a website that does exactly what the agency promises its clients: get straight to the point, deliver fast, and highlight the essentials.

Why now?

"We want to get back to the essentials: less talk, more clarity about our ability to produce, deliver, create beauty and order."

This return to basics is part of a clear strategy:

  • Show what we do best: innovative data projects, driven by rigor and creativity.
  • Accelerate understanding: a concise showcase site reduces friction for prospects.
  • Align experience with promise: our internal methods — structured and precise — must shine through the UX.

Red, white, black: unchanged symbolism

Back in 2011, red was chosen to represent the "eye-catching" aspect dear to the agency — to spotlight key information. Today, that same shade returns to convey:

  • Fighting spirit: detecting the decisive data point that drives decision-making.
  • Energy: the team’s ongoing curiosity and drive to learn.
  • Creative rigor: the new logotype sharpens the angles of "10h11" to balance the roundness of the clock — a symbol of mastered tempo.

A simplified grid, three core blocks

The homepage, swept by a Matrix-style rain of numbers, sets the tone: go beyond the imaginable. It’s now structured around a clear triptych:

  • Home: an immersive entry point where data pours in — it immediately embodies the 10h11 promise ("see beyond appearances") and guides the visitor.
  • Work: the main showcase of references and the core of social proof. Each project appears in a clean grid, ready to explore.
  • Services: 10h11’s offer, presented in three verbs — Collect, Analyze, Visualize — so everyone can understand how the team turns data into concrete results.

The red navigation bar, placed at the center of the screen like a ruler, acts as a visual anchor. No more sprawling menus: every click leads to the essentials, and the scroll reveals subtle micro-animations.

Performance: Form Serving Function

Streamlining also means optimization:

  • Fewer assets = faster load times.
  • Clarified navigation = fewer lost visitors, longer sessions.
  • Improved accessibility: strong contrasts, crisp typography, smooth keyboard navigation.

Early feedback confirms the approach was right: "It feels like the sharp, direct 10h11 from the early days," says a long-time client. A partner adds, "The site breathes and lets the work shine."

A Collective Effort, a Shared Vision

The project mobilized the whole team — designers, developers, content strategist, PM — in "brand memory" workshops. The central red bar quickly emerged as the natural symbol of stability. The site structure, once a major sticking point, was resolved in five minutes: "Home / Work / Services will be our essentials." When visuals are native, production flows smoothly.

By reviving its original red, 10h11 isn’t looking back — the agency is simply reclaiming the energy that sparked it into life: a love for data, the craft of shaping it, and the drive to make it useful. A return to the essentials that, far from narrowing the horizon, lays the groundwork for the next decade of innovation.

P.S.: 2011 site below:

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