Editor's note: Back in March—after Amazon had already implemented social distancing and invested in masks, gloves, enhanced cleaning, and many other health and safety measures—company leaders asked themselves, “Could we do more?” They knew that testing would be an important tool, and that supply would probably be tight, so they decided to pursue in-house COVID-19 testing—even though Amazon had no expertise in medical diagnostics. A small crew filmed the drive to make that vision a reality, and we're releasing videos now in hopes of inspiring those at other companies and institutions. We’re committed to helping NGOs, governments, and other companies by sharing details and best practices, and our teams are standing by to share more about what we’ve learned.

"Think big, think unconstrained, follow the science" is how Muge Erdirik Dogan, Vice President of Amazon Flex+Hub Worldwide, summed up the guiding principles that launched the testing project. "The impact of solving this, not only for Amazon, but for the total community is huge. You basically open up the economy again. We wanted to figure it out and wanted to share everything we find out with the broader community—because if we can do it, we can have other companies follow us and other researchers follow us in our approach."

How Amazon ramped up onsite COVID-19 testing | Ep 1/3

Erdirik Dogan, who has been at Amazon for 13 years, was brought on to the project because of her track record as a builder and her grit when faced with challenging tasks. She sprinted to help assemble the wide range of Amazon employees needed to get labs and testing sites running as fast as possible.

"We built a strong cross-functional team—research scientists, engineers, procurement specialists, operators, financial analysts," she said. "Everybody left their own day job, and this became the focus."

Speaking in the early weeks of the team's work, Jeff Wilke, CEO Worldwide Consumer, said, "If we can build lab capacity and testing capacity that adds to the capacity that's available in the world, then we have made the world a safer place. I can't imagine anything more rewarding in this time of crisis."

From dread to a sense of purpose

Jasmin Farshi's dream was to work on products that make a difference in people's lives. That's why she became an engineer, and it's why she's spent a decade at the Amazon facility where Kindle was born, Lab 126 in Sunnyvale, California.

Like countless others around the world, Farshi's life swerved to adapt to the pandemic. She was working from home, sheltering in place, overloading on cable news, and feeling more and more futility and helplessness. Then, on a Monday in late March, she got a call from an Amazon colleague, asking her to join the new testing project.

Within days, she was making decisions about buying equipment for a prototype lab.

Building the lab - episode 2 of Amazon's "The Test"

Helping keep employees and customers safe

Cem Sibay, the Amazon Vice President who leads the testing project, said, "We all feel like we're going to help save lives here. We approach any delay as the most important thing that we need to solve for."

In addition to the original lab, there are now labs in Hebron, Kentucky and Manchester in the United Kingdom. Amazon is already conducting thousands of tests a day, and is on pace to conduct 50,000 tests a day across 650 sites by next month.

Geneva Drouin has traveled to Amazon facilities to set up workplace testing sites. She finds meaning in knowing that keeping employees safe has a multiplier effect on the rest of society, since people can get the products they need without leaving home.

"I want to make sure that our customers, just like my parents, can stay at home and stay isolated through this time," she said.

Piloting test sites (episode 3 of Amazon's "The Test")

Kristin Turner, who designed apps and retail stores for Amazon customers in her pre-pandemic life and now spends her time at Amazon fulfillment centers refining the design of testing sites, is motivated by what employees tell her after they learn they're COVID-19 negative.

"They feel safer going home," she said. "They feel like they can go up and cuddle their kids. So knowing that this is creating some relief and some ability to exhale and breathe is really rewarding."

Images from inside our labs