Saltar al contenido principal

With a strong culture of innovation, United Airlines was eager to implement GenAI. Together, we developed solutions that empower employees and elevate the customer experience.

A happy Unitd Airlines customer holds their device out of the plane window to take a photo of the sunrise.

Impact

More relevant, efficient customer service and greater transparency for travelers when flight plans change have strengthened customer experience and trust.

Industry

Travel & hospitality

Key Services

Strategy icon
Strategy
Data icon
Data
Artificial intelligence icon
Artificial intelligence
System implementation icon
System implementation
Experience strategy & design icon
Experience strategy & design
Digital product building
Digital product building
Operations icon
Operations
Privacy & security
Privacy & security

Key Technologies/Platforms

  • Amazon Web Services (AWS) 
  • Claude (Anthropic) 


The Vision

You don’t get to where United Airlines is today without a knack for providing customers with great experiences enabled by cutting-edge technology at scale.

As the world’s largest airline, United has an industry-leading loyalty program, an award-winning app loved by travelers, and routes to more than 210 destinations in the US and more than 120 internationally. United’s employees—agents, flight attendants, pilots, and so many other skilled team members—are responsible for making sure the thousands of customers they serve daily have the best experiences possible, whether they’re on the app or in person.

And according to CIO Jason Birnbaum, United’s technology organization plays a large part in that mission. That’s why, every year, United organizes an Innovation Day, which is a hackathon-inspired event that caps off a period of time for teams to commit to solving problems through emerging technology. So when generative AI (GenAI) was beginning its meteoric ascent, it made perfect sense for United to dedicate an entire Innovation Day to this exciting technology to explore the art of the possible. What better way to educate employees, inspire new ideas, and test what GenAI could offer United’s employees and customers?

A United Airlines plane tail stands tall with a colorful sunset.


I believe our customers not only expect, but really demand that they have the best digital experiences they possibly can. Our job in technology is to continue to provide them with these amazing experiences.

Jason Birnbaum

CIO, United Airlines



The Solution

Together, we brought GenAI use cases to production that elevate United’s customer experience and built an internal platform that enables teams to continue their innovation.


A happy passenger finds their seat for the journey ahead.

A testbed for customer-centric innovation

With less than 60 days until the GenAI-themed Innovation Day, Birnbaum and the entire technology organization wanted to empower teams to be able to test out different GenAI use cases independently and securely. United had partnered with Slalom to build a machine learning operations (MLOps) platform that streamlines the creation, deployment, and management of machine learning models, so United’s leadership knew Slalom had the knowledge and expertise to help extend that platform to accommodate GenAI.

We got to building and integrating a GenAI “testbed” that securely leverages United’s data infrastructure. Built on AWS, the testbed uses Amazon Bedrock to give teams access to a variety of proprietary and open-source GenAI models including Amazon Titan, Anthropic’s Claude, and Meta’s Llama. Many participating teams used the testbed to determine which AI model best fit their use case in time to demonstrate that use case at the Innovation Day. In total, executives across the enterprise, including the CEO of United, evaluated more than 30 use cases as part of the Innovation Day. 

Grant Milstead, a vice president of digital technology at United, who helped lead the preparations for the GenAI Innovation Day, emphasized how important it was—and is—for United’s teams to be able to access the testbed on their own. “At one point we had, like, 30 teams doing different ideas,” said Milstead. “With that many hands in the cookie jar, it couldn’t just be one person at Slalom giving access out and showing how this worked. We had to be able to get a lot of developers in there and it had to be something that was kind of enterprise-grade versus just a science project.”


The insight we believe is that no matter the situation, if you’re honest, empathetic, and transparent about what’s happening, the experience for people is better.

Jason Birnbaum
CIO, United Airlines


Moving two customer-focused use cases from concept to reality

The GenAI Innovation Day was a huge success, and the expanded MLOps platform will support United teams’ innovation and experimentation well into the future—and far beyond 30 use cases. Already, two use cases showcased at the Innovation Day have been released as solutions with Slalom’s help. 

United refers to the first solution as an enhanced version of its “Every Flight Has a Story” (EFHaS) messaging program. Even before the arrival of GenAI, a team of “Storytellers” at United have informed travelers about unexpected changes to flight statuses, like delays, through detailed but easy-to-understand custom messages. With the new GenAI capabilities of EFHaS, Storytellers will be able to customize 50% of all flight updates United sends, up from 15%. Storytellers still carefully review each AI-generated message but can ultimately customize and share a much greater volume of messages than they could have prepared manually. The result is more travelers receiving top-notch, transparent updates as soon as their flight statuses change. 

The second solution is a customer care copilot that leverages GenAI to help agents provide faster and more empathetic responses to the thousands of email inquiries they receive from customers every day. 


A happy girl colors at her seat while on a United Airlines flight.
A person use their mobile device to explore the United Airlines app.

Exceptional service at scale

In travel, plans change. United’s initial GenAI use cases give employees the grace to be ready for this—and to be ready to help customers navigate it. We think our work with United proves that in the right hands, artificial intelligence can enhance emotional intelligence. It can help people do what only humans can: care. 

”We have the greatest employees in the industry, in my opinion,” said Stacey Wronkowski, a vice president of digital technology at United whose group leads its GenAI Center of Excellence (CoE), a dedicated team assembled to guide and scale United’s GenAI vision. “We are transparent people. We are caring and empathetic people. What it comes down to is, we don’t have the ability to handcraft a personal message to every customer, given our size. That connection with customers and messaging to them that is personal and relevant would be hard to scale without a capability like this.”

Given how fast GenAI is evolving, it’s almost impossible to imagine how United might be using the technology a year or even a quarter from now—almost. With a robust platform at its fingertips, a talented CoE in the pilot’s seat, and our continued partnership, United’s GenAI future is clearer than ever. But rather than speculate here about what use cases could be just around the corner, we’ll spend our last words on something a little more human by thanking United’s teams for the opportunity to join the first “flights” of their GenAI journey. 

On behalf of Slalom and the entire crew, thank you for choosing to fly with us, and welcome to the age of AI. 


A United Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner soars in the sky though an incredible cotton candy pink sunset.


Customer Impact

United’s developers can experiment freely, its teams can serve customers efficiently, and its customers are happier for it. 

35%
more flight updates are customized for travelers thanks to GenAI
2x
faster mean time to resolution with the customer care copilot






Let’s solve together.