Barbican business events marks International Women’s Day 2026

Barbican business events marks International Women’s Day 2026

Introduction

Barbican Business Events has reviewed the outcomes of its Barbican Women programme, a 10-day initiative staged around International Women’s Day (IWD) 2026. Centred on this year’s IWD theme, “Give To Gain”, the London-based venue used a curated series of activities to convene colleagues, partners and clients, placing collaboration, knowledge-sharing and wellbeing at the forefront of its events agenda.

Background and industry context

Across the global events sector, equity, diversity and inclusion programmes have become an increasingly visible part of venue and organiser strategies. International Women’s Day has emerged as a key focal point, often used by organisers and venues to test new formats for internal engagement, stakeholder collaboration and values-led programming.

For major cultural and conference venues such as the Barbican, these initiatives sit alongside commercial events business, providing an opportunity to align internal culture with the expectations of event organisers seeking more inclusive and socially aware destinations. Programmes like Barbican Women are therefore not only HR or CSR exercises; they are also a signal to the wider market about how a venue approaches people, partnerships and content.

Key developments: the Barbican Women programme

The Barbican Women programme unfolded over 10 days in March 2026 and was framed explicitly around the International Women’s Day 2026 theme, “Give To Gain”. The concept emphasised generosity of time, expertise and support as mechanisms for shared professional and personal growth.

Within that framework, Barbican Business Events hosted and supported a range of activities aimed at different internal and external audiences. While specific session formats were varied, the programme was designed around several core objectives:

  • Creating cross-team connections: Activities brought together staff from different departments, as well as agency and supplier partners, to encourage dialogue beyond day-to-day operational silos.
  • Highlighting women’s experiences in events and culture: Sessions reflected on the role of women across the Barbican’s business events, arts and learning programmes, including the challenges and opportunities they face in leadership and technical roles.
  • Encouraging peer learning: Workshops and discussions promoted shared learning, where participants exchanged practical insights, resources and support networks.
  • Promoting creativity and wellbeing: Elements of the programme were intentionally designed to spark creativity and joy, using the Barbican’s cultural setting to create space for reflection and experimentation.

The initiative involved colleagues and stakeholders from across the Barbican Centre ecosystem, including the business events team that manages conferences, exhibitions, corporate meetings and hybrid gatherings. The programme highlighted how internal engagement and community-building can be integrated with a venue’s broader positioning as a host for business events.

Industry impact and signals for the business events sector

While the Barbican Women programme was primarily an internal and partner-focused initiative, it reflects several broader developments in the events industry.

  • Embedding values into venue strategy: Increasingly, venues are expected to articulate how their internal practices align with the expectations of event organisers, sponsors and attendees. Programmes linked to International Women’s Day signal that venues are treating inclusion and equity as operational priorities rather than occasional marketing themes.
  • Expanding the scope of business events teams: Business events departments are moving beyond sales and logistics, becoming more involved in content, community and culture. By participating in and in some cases curating initiatives like Barbican Women, these teams demonstrate their role in shaping the narrative and experience associated with the venue.
  • Offering a testbed for new formats: Internal and partner-facing programmes allow venues to trial new session structures, interactive formats and hybrid components. The learnings can then be transferred to client events, from leadership retreats to large conferences.
  • Responding to client expectations on ESG: Many corporate and association buyers now evaluate venues through an ESG (environmental, social and governance) lens. Documented initiatives around gender equity and staff wellbeing provide tangible examples a venue can reference in RFP responses and site visits.

Why this matters for event professionals and technology providers

For planners, associations and corporates, programmes such as Barbican Women provide indicators about how a venue might support inclusive and people-centred event design. Beyond physical infrastructure and location, buyers are increasingly considering how venues embody the values their events aim to communicate.

Event professionals may draw several practical insights from Barbican’s approach:

  • Year-round application of IWD themes: While tied to International Women’s Day, the “Give To Gain” concept readily translates into year-round initiatives, including mentorship networks, peer learning circles, and collaborative content development for conferences.
  • Designing for connection, not only content: The Barbican Women programme emphasised connection, creativity and joy, underscoring the importance of designing formats that enable human interaction and psychological safety alongside information delivery.
  • Leveraging cultural assets: As a multi-arts centre, the Barbican can integrate cultural experiences into business programming. Other venues and organisers can similarly look at how their unique assets—whether architectural, technological or community-based—can be harnessed in values-led initiatives.

For technology providers focused on hybrid platforms, engagement tools and analytics, these kinds of programmes highlight emerging demands:

  • Tools to support inclusive participation: Platforms that enable anonymous questions, moderated discussions, or small-group virtual rooms can help reproduce the intimacy and safety needed for sensitive conversations about equity and leadership.
  • Measurement beyond attendance: As venues and organisers report on the impact of inclusion initiatives, analytics tools that can track engagement patterns, sentiment and long-term community growth will become more valuable.
  • Content longevity and knowledge sharing: Digital asset management and on-demand platforms can extend the life of IWD-inspired programmes, allowing internal and external audiences to revisit and repurpose content.

Conclusion

Barbican Business Events’ reflection on its Barbican Women programme illustrates how a major venue is using International Women’s Day as a catalyst for internal collaboration and external signalling. By framing a 10-day initiative around generosity, shared learning and connection, the Barbican aligns its cultural identity with the expectations of an events industry that is under growing pressure to demonstrate inclusive practice.

For event professionals, the programme serves as a reference point for integrating values, wellbeing and professional development into the design of both internal and client-facing events. For technology providers, it underscores a continued shift toward platforms and tools capable of supporting inclusive, measurable and community-focused experiences—whether delivered on site, online or in hybrid formats.

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