On March 8, 2026, in honour of , a new edition of SheBuilds on Lovable invited builders from around the world to a 24-hour global, powered by Anthropic. On top of that, participants in the SheBuilds campaign receive $100 in Anthropic API credits and $250 in Stripe fee credits to kickstart their builds and remove early-stage barriers to creation.
This isn't just another hackathon; it's a campaign that blends community, technology, and real output. It asks a simple question of the tech industry and its marketers:
If I'm honest, I have mixed feelings. We need a stronger community and louder voices for women in tech not just on a specific international day, but every day. I'd like to believe we are beyond the stereotype of what jobs women can or cannot do, and what is left for men. Beyond any single campaign, we should advocate for women as builders in the tech world every day.
Still, every time I see a campaign like this, it sparks some hope inside me. It reminds me that we are not reduced to specific skills on a specific day, and that progress is possible.
Returning to SheBuilds, which is rooted in a longer tradition: the 48-hour virtual buildathons Lovable has run for women founders and builders, where ideas become real applications over an intense weekend of collaboration.
In October 2025, 60 women joined a remote, AI-enabled sprint to design, prototype, and launch working products in 48 hours, and the resonant element wasn't speed, it was .Â
In 2026, the campaign took this idea further. Instead of being constrained to a single track, it anchored itself to a global cultural moment where women's participation in tech isn't just acknowledged but , with free build credits, peer connection, live sessions, and an open invitation to anyone who wants to what innovation should .Â
We have been talking in tech about inclusion and diversity for years. Many initiatives generate reports, webinars, and packs of aspirational slides. SheBuilds does something different: it creates the conditions for . In the world of software, execution matters. A founder funded or a product launched is a literal piece of industry change, unlike any promise that never materialises.
SheBuilds lowers barriers in two ways. First, it reshapes . Participants don't need traditional engineering skills; they need a laptop, an idea, and the willingness to build it. Second, by connecting to a broader cultural moment, International Women's Day, it reframes participation as both a personal achievement and a public conversation about who gets to shape tech.Â
There's good evidence that this model matters. Across the Lovable community, builders report that the ritual of building, not discussing, changes how they see themselves in technology. For many, shipping a live prototype in 48 hours meant moving from being to being ; more than that, it positioned them within a network that values rapid iteration and real product agency.Â
From the industry's perspective, this matters because it accelerates in a genuinely participatory way. Rather than positioning a platform as something to , the SheBuilds campaign positions it as something you . When marketers tie campaigns to output, not just signup counts, they create moments of meaningful interaction. That's both a brand story and a user experience strategy.
Lovable's move to embrace International Women's Day isn't a gesture; it's a strategic campaign. By hosting SheBuilds events tied to a global calendar, the company amplifies its mission, and invites participation on a broader scale. It embodies a shift in : merging community activation with cultural moments, and showing that building isn't reserved for a subset with coding degrees.Â
If the tech industry wants to look past fancy words like diversity and equity, it needs campaigns that exchange words for , panels for , and theories for . That's the real invitation SheBuilds extends to its participants, and the lesson it offers marketers who want to tell .
The tech world still doesn't reflect the people it serves. Women make up far less than half of technical roles and leadership positions, and the gap shows up in boardrooms, engineering teams, and the very products we use every day. Representation isn't a nice-to-have statistic; it shapes what technology looks like and who gets to steer it.Â
From where I stand, SheBuilds on Lovable isn't just another event. It is a that meets a long-standing need, a space where women are not only welcomed but empowered to create, ship, and be seen. It turns invisible potential into , inviting women to bring their solutions into the world rather than waiting for permission to do so.Â
When women build, the whole industry becomes richer in ideas, perspective, and purpose. Moments like this, tied to real creative work, are not symbolic gestures. They are steps toward a tech ecosystem where women aren't exceptions but equals.Â
Let the world know the builder you are! Celebrate your voice here! Isn't this lovable?