Sea Leisure Yachting Group

International Women’s Day 2026

International Women’s Day always comes with its share of campaigns, posts, and statements. This year, we chose a simpler approach inside Sea Leisure Yachting Group: instead of speaking about women across the ecosystem, we took the time to listen to them. We met women working across different branches of the group, in very different environments and roles. Some are visible in the rhythm of day to day operations, others work behind the scenes where precision matters, and others contribute through hands on craft and production. The roles do not look alike, but the way they described their work often led back to the same idea: being part of something that is built collectively over time.

The 2026 theme, Give to Gain, did not appear as a slogan in our conversations. It came up naturally, through stories of how work actually happens when teams rely on each other. One of them summed it up in a sentence that stayed with us: supporting and empowering others helps everyone grow together. Across the discussions, “giving” rarely meant grand gestures. It looked more like daily consistency: taking time to help someone learn, making sure things are done properly, sharing information, staying calm when pressure rises, being present when someone needs guidance. Sometimes it was direct. Sometimes it was invisible. As one woman put it very plainly: I support indirectly, but I support the business.

Support that keeps everything moving

Support took many forms depending on the role. In some teams, it meant creating a safe environment where people can work with confidence. In others, it meant helping colleagues grow into their responsibilities and develop their skills. And in some functions, it meant ensuring that nothing collapses because a detail was missed: processes, accuracy, coordination, preparation.

That is often the difference between something that looks smooth from the outside and something that actually runs smoothly inside. In a multi brand ecosystem, those forms of support connect. They travel across teams and locations. They become part of the culture.

Pride, belonging, and responsibility

Another strong thread was pride. Not the exaggerated kind, and not the promotional kind. More a quiet pride in knowing that the work matters, that it reaches real clients, and that it contributes to a sector that is still evolving.

The blue economy has not always been perceived as a place where everyone naturally belongs. Yet what came through clearly was a sense of legitimacy: the feeling of being in the right place, doing real work, and building expertise. For some, that pride also carries responsibility. The idea that simply being there, progressing, and taking space with competence makes it easier for others to imagine themselves in the same environment.

Growth that happens inside teams

Growth came up again and again, but rarely as a personal ambition disconnected from the group. People spoke about learning on the job, gaining confidence, and becoming more solid in their role, but always in relation to others: a team, a mentor, a manager, a colleague who helped, a workplace that allowed progression.

That is where Give to Gain becomes concrete. What you give to others often comes back as trust, as experience, as a smoother working environment, as stronger collaboration. In the long run, it creates more opportunities for everyone, not only for one person.

What we wanted to highlight

This is what we wanted to share for International Women’s Day 2026: not a perfect story, not a marketing statement, but a closer look at what keeps an ecosystem moving. The people behind the work. The culture of support. The pride of being part of something built in real conditions, with real teams.

Because in the end, “giving” inside a company is not a line in a theme. It is the daily way people show up for each other. And that is often what makes the biggest difference.

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