In most advertisements, the time displayed on a watch or clock is usually 10:10.
Why Watches in Ads Always Show 10:10
Next time you're flipping through a magazine or scrolling past a watch ad, take a closer look at the time. Whether it's a Rolex, a Timex, or the latest Apple Watch, the hands will almost certainly be positioned at 10:10 (give or take a minute). This isn't coincidence—it's one of advertising's most enduring standards, backed by actual psychological research.
The practice has been around since the 1950s, though interestingly, watches in the 1920s and 1930s used to display 8:20 instead. So what changed?
The Smiling Face Trick
When watch hands point to 10 and 2, they create a subtle "V" shape that resembles a smiling face. Your brain picks up on this unconsciously, triggering a positive emotional response. It sounds almost too simple to be true, but in 2017, researchers published a study in Frontiers in Psychology that proved it works.
They showed participants watches set to three different times: 10:10 (smiling face), 8:20 (sad face), and 11:30 (neutral). The results were clear—watches set at 10:10 induced significantly stronger feelings of pleasure and increased purchase intent. Women showed particularly strong positive responses.
The kicker? Participants had no idea the time setting was influencing their emotions. The effect is entirely subconscious.
It's Not Just About Feelings
Psychology aside, there are practical reasons for the 10:10 standard:
- Logo visibility: The hands frame the brand name (usually positioned just below 12 o'clock) instead of blocking it
- Symmetry: The V-shape is aesthetically balanced and pleasing to the eye
- Feature display: Important elements like date windows, subdials, or complications remain visible
Brand Variations
While 10:10 is the standard, some brands tweak it slightly to stand out. Apple sets their watches to 10:09 in advertisements—just ahead of the curve, literally. Timex uses the ultra-precise 10:09:36. And when Rolex features watches with date displays, they always show Monday the 28th, chosen because it maximizes the space in the date window.
Even as watches evolved from mechanical movements to digital displays to smartwatches, the 10:10 rule endured. Check ads for Fitbit, Samsung, or Garmin—they all follow the same playbook.
The Sad Face Era
Before 10:10 became standard, the watch industry preferred 8:20. It was symmetrical and didn't cover the logo, but it had one fatal flaw: the downward-pointing hands resembled a frowning face. Not exactly the vibe you want when trying to sell a luxury timepiece.
The shift to 10:10 happened gradually through the 1940s and 1950s as advertisers realized the psychological advantage of an upward, optimistic angle. By the time researchers formally studied the phenomenon decades later, they were simply confirming what the industry already knew from experience: a smiling watch sells better.
So the next time you see a watch ad, you'll know exactly why it's smiling at you—and why you might just smile back.