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Lauren Woods on pandemic

From AWS re:Invent 2020 – Lauren Woods of Southwest Airlines on using AWS to improve its technical health · · AmazonWebServices

“This is by far the most challenging time that Southwest Airlines has faced, but we're not shrinking from this challenge; instead we see it as an opportunity to improve our technical health and emerge stronger at the end.”

Lauren Woods
Senior VP of Technology & Chief Information Officer, Southwest Airlines Co
pandemicresiliencetechnical healthstrategy

On , Lauren Woods, Senior VP of Technology & Chief Information Officer at Southwest Airlines Co, spoke about pandemic during AWS re:Invent 2020 – Lauren Woods of Southwest Airlines on using AWS to improve its technical health on AmazonWebServices.

AWS re:Invent 2020 – Lauren Woods of Southwest Airlines on using AWS to improve its technical health
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AWS re:Invent 2020 – Lauren Woods of Southwest Airlines on using AWS to improve its technical health
AmazonWebServices
Watch on YouTube
Southwest Airlines uses AWS and AWS partners, like Onica, to help it build the technology it needs to thrive. In this video, Lauren Woods, Managing Director of Technology Platforms, describes how AWS helps Southwest become more efficient, technically advanced, and able to take on new opportunities. Southwest Airlines is the largest carrier by originating passengers in the U.S., celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2021. Southwest Airlines uses a variety of AWS services, including Amazon Aurora and Amazon EKS, to modernize its applications, and it used AWS Lake Formation, Amazon S3, and Amazon Athena to build its first cloud-native data lake. Subscribe: More AWS videos http://bit.ly/2O3zS75 More AWS events videos http://bit.ly/316g9t4 #AWS
Lauren Woods

About Lauren Woods

Senior VP of Technology & Chief Information Officer · Southwest Airlines Co

Lauren Woods, then Managing Director of Technology Platforms at Southwest Airlines, spoke at AWS re:Invent 2020 about the airline’s cloud migration and partnership with AWS and its partner Onica. She described 2020 as "by far the most challenging time that Southwest Airlines has faced" but said the company viewed it as "an opportunity to improve our technical health." Woods noted that Southwest had recorded a profit for its 47th consecutive year in 2019 and that the airline used AWS services such as Amazon Aurora, Amazon EKS, and AWS Lake Formation to modernize applications. She stated that the company created a "southwest cloud common platform" to encourage consistency and that a team with no prior cloud experience built a mission-critical application in six months while working remotely. Woods highlighted specific outcomes from the cloud migration, including the ability to test and deploy updates "multiple times a week during the day" rather than overnight on a monthly or quarterly basis. She also said Southwest worked with NASA and air traffic control to improve predictions of off-block and gate arrival times, resulting in "significant cost savings." Woods expressed confidence that with AWS support and the airline's employees, Southwest would "emerge from this storm of challenging times stronger than ever before."

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