Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings has appointed Emma Woodthorpe as chief people officer, marking a strategic leadership move aimed at reinforcing the company’s global workforce capability and organisational culture as it continues to scale its aviation and air cargo operations.
Woodthorpe assumed the role on 27 April and will report directly to chief executive Michael Steen, while also joining the company’s executive leadership team. The appointment places people strategy at the centre of Atlas Air Worldwide’s broader growth agenda at a time when aviation logistics providers are navigating sustained demand pressures and evolving workforce requirements.
Focus on leadership, culture and organisational alignment
In her new role, Woodthorpe will oversee a broad human resources portfolio spanning talent acquisition, leadership development, organisational effectiveness, total rewards, employee engagement, HR operations and people technology systems.
According to the company, her mandate is closely tied to strengthening leadership capability across the organisation while ensuring that workforce structures remain aligned with business priorities in a highly competitive and operationally complex global air cargo environment.
The role also reflects an increasing emphasis within the aviation sector on integrating people strategy with operational resilience, particularly as airlines and cargo operators expand fleet capacity, digital systems and global service networks.
Extensive HR leadership background across industrial and defence sectors
Woodthorpe brings more than two decades of senior human resources leadership experience across technology, industrial and advanced manufacturing sectors.
Prior to joining Atlas Air Worldwide, she served as chief people officer at Brooks Automation for nearly four years, where she led global HR transformation initiatives focused on scaling talent infrastructure and enhancing organisational performance.
Before that, she spent more than five years at Mercury Systems as senior vice president and chief human resources officer, where she was responsible for aligning workforce strategy with business expansion in a highly regulated and technology-driven environment.
Earlier in her career, she held senior HR leadership positions at Xylem and DuPont, building experience across global industrial operations and complex organisational environments.
Leadership perspective on culture and growth
Welcoming the appointment, chief executive Michael Steen highlighted Woodthorpe’s track record in strengthening leadership capability and embedding performance-driven organisational cultures.
He noted her experience in improving employee engagement, defining behavioural frameworks and building more connected organisational structures as key attributes supporting Atlas Air Worldwide’s long-term strategic objectives.
Woodthorpe, in turn, described the appointment as a pivotal opportunity to support the company’s evolving global workforce.
She emphasised that people and culture will play a critical role in enabling sustained growth, particularly as the company continues to expand its operational footprint and service capabilities across global air cargo markets.
Workforce strategy as a competitive differentiator
The appointment reflects a broader trend across the aviation and logistics sector, where workforce development and organisational design are increasingly seen as core competitive differentiators.
As demand for air cargo capacity remains structurally elevated and operational complexity increases, companies are placing greater emphasis on leadership pipelines, employee retention strategies and digital HR systems to support agile, scalable operations.
Within this context, Atlas Air Worldwide’s decision to elevate its people function underscores the growing recognition that talent strategy is now directly linked to operational resilience, service reliability and long-term business performance in global aviation logistics.







