International Women’s Day 2026—Sunday 8 March

If organisations truly want high performance, they can’t afford to ignore half the talent pool.

If they are serious about performance, innovation and growth, then gender equality shouldn’t be a conversation we revisit once a year.

And yet, every March, International Women’s Day comes around and we find ourselves asking the same question:

Why do we still need it?

It’s a fair question.

After all, we now have women in leadership, women in politics, women running global organisations. On the surface, progress looks significant.

But scratch a little deeper and the reality becomes clearer.

Women are still paid less on average. Women are still less likely to be promoted into senior leadership roles. Women still carry a disproportionate share of caring responsibilities at home and many women are still navigating workplaces that were never really designed with them in mind.

So yes—International Women’s Day still matters. As does Disability Awareness week. As does Pride month.

These moments exist because they shine a light on issues that are still very real. They create space for conversations that might otherwise be avoided. They remind us that progress rarely happens by accident.

And before anyone says it—there is also an International Men’s Day, held annually on 19 November. It highlights very real issues affecting men including abuse, homelessness, suicide and violence. Because these things matter too.

International Women’s Day simply exists for the same reason: to recognise that inequality still exists and that progress requires attention.

The theme for International Women’s Day 2026 is Give to Gain, encouraging progress towards gender equality through what we are prepared to give.

There are many things that could be given that would result in gain for everyone: respect, equal pay, stretch opportunities, protection.

But in my experience, the things that make the biggest difference in the workplace are often the simplest:

  • Give visibility
  • Give a voice
  • Give credit

Because when those things are missing, something powerful happens—and not in a good way.

  • Talented people stay quiet
  • Confidence erodes
  • And organisations lose far more potential than they realise

For many women, early career experiences can involve quietly adapting to the environment around them. Putting your head down. Working hard. Accepting the culture for what it is.

  • Being the quieter voice around the table
  • Being overlooked
  • Often ignored

Confidence takes a knock, but you tell yourself this is simply “how it is”.

Opportunities come and, when they do, they are taken. Progression happens through capability, resilience and results. Yet even with success, the sense of not quite belonging can linger.

  • Speaking up can feel risky
  • Standing out can feel uncomfortable
  • Taking up space can feel like something that requires permission

Only in recent years something became clear to me:

This isn’t how it has to be.

The most effective organisations understand something very simple: people do their best work when they feel valued, included and psychologically safe.

And this is where the conversation about women at work needs to move beyond representation alone.

Women bring enormous value to the workplace. Not just in capability and performance, but in perspective. Women bring different experiences, different ways of solving problems, different approaches to leadership and collaboration.

Many women also navigate careers while raising families, managing caring responsibilities and balancing expectations that society still disproportionately places on them. That resilience, adaptability and emotional intelligence are strengths—yet too often they are overlooked rather than respected.

The truth is that, for generations, women have learned to change the shape of themselves to fit in.

But workplaces shouldn’t require that.

Gender equality is not about women “winning” and men “losing”. Feminism isn’t about exclusion or blame. At its core, it is simply about fairness.

It asks us to look honestly at the structures, behaviours and assumptions that still create barriers, often unintentionally, for half the workforce.

This isn’t about blame.

It’s about awareness.

Because when workplaces truly value the contribution women bring—when voices are heard, achievements are recognised and opportunities are genuinely equal—the benefits extend far beyond gender.

  • Teams perform better
  • Cultures strengthen
  • Organisations thrive

And ultimately, when women thrive, we all rise.

Blog author:

Picture of Deborah Whitworth-Hilton

Deborah Whitworth-Hilton

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