Magnum-44 Security
Thirty-three years of trust, online.
In security, the client isn't choosing a product — they're entrusting someone with what matters most to them: their premises, their valuables, their people. In a decision like that, age and references count for more than any slogan. Magnum-44 has operated since 1993; thirty-three years of experience, licenses, insurance, and a serious client roster stand behind it. The problem was that the old site conveyed none of that weight.
So the job of the new site wasn't to invent a new message. It was to present the existing credibility with the dignity it deserved.
Heritage as a visual language
A thirty-year-old company can't look like a startup that launched yesterday, but it can't look dated either. The answer is a dark, near-black base with a single gold-amber accent and large, confident display typography — a serious, premium, institutional mood. The brand's center of gravity is a jubilee seal that compresses the "33 years" message into a single image and recurs through the site.
The brand line — "In the name of security, security in its name." — sits in both the hero and the footer, framing everything around it.


Trust has to be seen, not claimed
Trust works when it's proof, not a promise. So the site works with demonstrable facts: the founding year in a large number, the licenses and liability insurance itemized, a stylized map of Hungary for nationwide coverage, a timeline of three consecutive years of an industry award, and a wall of client logos. Each one a silent argument.
The six services — from rapid-response patrol to cash transport to solar-park guarding — fall under one shared promise: "six services, one contract." The process shows in five steps what happens from the first call to continuous oversight — because in a security service, predictability is the product itself.
Searchable, findable
The nav holds the Console here too (Ctrl K): a site-wide search with an AI mode — the same pattern I built into my own portfolio and the BITNEX site. In a trust industry, a search that gives fast, precise answers is itself a signal of trust.
The content structure was built around that: dedicated industry and local landing pages (financial-sector protection, logistics centers, "asset protection in Nyíregyháza"), with strong internal linking, so the company shows up where its clients actually search. The framework is Next.js, running on Vercel — the new site lives at this address until the old domain is pointed to it.
There's always a next level.
If you like what you see (whether you're building a product or a team) I'd love to hear about it.
