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From $500 and a Dream to CFO: Alumna Dan Zhang Is Opening Doors for the Next Generation

By Jessica Youngman

May 21, 2026

The ClickUp executive has revived the Maxwell Student Emergency Support Fund to pay it forward—and because she knows firsthand what’s at stake. 

The night Dan Zhang arrived in the United States, she slept on the floor of her empty apartment, dreaming of a new life.

She had $500 to her name—no safety net, no family nearby and she spoke only conversational English. She had an acceptance letter from the Maxwell School, a paying job as a teaching assistant, and an unshakeable belief that she was exactly where she was supposed to be.

“I still remember that night when I was doing research on Maxwell,” Zhang recalled. “I told my dorm mate: ‘Only if I can get into Maxwell, I think I will be the luckiest person in the whole world.’”

She got in, and she completed a master’s degree. Today, Zhang—the chief financial officer of ClickUp, an AI productivity platform with more than 1,000 employees and clients ranging from small businesses to Fortune 500 companies—is making sure the next generation of students has the support she once needed.

Zhang made a financial gift to the Maxwell School, jump-starting the Maxwell Student Emergency Support Fund which provides help to undergraduate and graduate students facing urgent needs including emergency travel, food, housing, visa issues and tuition.

A black-and-white photo of a person sitting on a campus lawn, smiling over their shoulder at the camera while holding a can and a plate of food, with other students and university buildings visible in the background.
Alumna Dan Zhang is shown at a pizza party on her first day on campus at Syracuse. 

The emergency fund relies on donor support, and Zhang is hoping fellow Maxwell alumni will join her in contributing to it. “Every gift, no matter the amount, can keep a student’s dream alive,” she said.

From Beijing to Syracuse

Zhang grew up in China, earned an undergraduate degree in sociology in Beijing and worked briefly as a journalist before deciding she wanted more. She was drawn to questions about gender inequality, organizational structure and how societies work, and she believed graduate study in the U.S. was the path forward.

Zhang received a string of rejection letters before Maxwell saw in her the skills and qualities other institutions overlooked. “That was really life changing because at the time I felt stuck and I was ready to give up,” she said, adding that the acceptance letter signaled, “‘We’re willing to take a chance on you—arms wide open.’”

The early days in the U.S. were challenging beyond the financial constraints.

“I came to this country like a blank canvas,” she said. “I had to figure out the culture, the values, the way everything works.”

People made all the difference, she said. At Syracuse and Maxwell, she said she easily found mentors like professors Andrew London, Amy Lutz and Prema Kurien who offered moral support at critical moments, put American culture into context with her studies, and encouraged her critical analysis.

One professor, Yingyi Ma, knew exactly what Zhang was facing. Ma had walked a similar path a decade earlier, coming from Nanjing University to study sociology in the U.S. Zhang said Ma told her, “‘The right support at the right moment changes everything. My door is always open.’”

Across campus, staff helped Zhang navigate systems she didn’t yet understand. The patience, she says, was everything.

“The faith they put in you—it’s like, ‘You’re going to do great, and you just need a little help and a little nudge to get you on the ramp,’” she said.

An Unconventional Path

With the encouragement of faculty, including College of Arts and Sciences math professor Pinyuen Chen, Zhang pursued master’s degrees in sociology and applied statistics. The interdisciplinary combination that raised eyebrows but proved transformative. While studying at Maxwell, she audited courses at the Whitman School of Management, chasing curiosity wherever it led.

“Maxwell encouraged students to branch out,” she said. “Every advisor, every mentor embraced that belief—to develop full-brain students and future leaders.”

After earning her degree in 2011, Zhang set out to build what she calls her own path. She joined Amazon as an entry-level financial analyst. Then she moved to an online travel company to study brand-building, then to Zynga, where she got her first taste of fast-paced Silicon Valley culture. Soon after came another opportunity, to join the “software as a service” (SaaS) industry.

Along the way, she earned another degree—a master of science in finance from the University of Illinois.

Then she did something that surprised even her colleagues: she left finance entirely.

Recognizing that she needed to understand the business from the inside out, Zhang spent three years in global sales strategy, traveling with top sales teams and learning how deals actually get made. It was unconventional for someone with her background, and exactly the kind of move she said Maxwell had trained her to make.

“I'm not building my resume,” she said. “I’m building my own path.”

When Zhang stepped back into finance, she was a different kind of executive. She joined ClickUp five years ago, first as vice president of finance, then ascending to CFO. She hopes to take the company public.

I came to the U.S. as a poor international student on a teaching assistant scholarship from Syracuse. I'll never forget how the Maxwell School opened that first door for me. It changed the trajectory of my life. I am honored to help create that same opportunity for others.”

Dan Zhang ’11 M.A. (Soc)

Her social science training, it turns out, was anything but abstract. Zhang draws directly on sociological theory in her work, including the concept of “structural holes,” a framework she has applied to product positioning by identifying the gaps in organizational communication that technology can bridge. She also uses ClickUp’s own AI capabilities daily, training an AI agent with information about her decision-making style to help analyze proposals and surface recommendations that align with her judgment—saving hours while sharpening her focus.

That hands-on experience informs her broader thinking about artificial intelligence and the future of work. She believes AI will transform entry-level roles—but that it makes programs like Maxwell's more valuable, not less.

“AI cannot replace critical thinking,” she said. “We have moved from an economy built more on people’s right brains.”

She was impressed to learn that Maxwell has launched an AI policy minor and rolled out Claude Enterprise across campus, and she sees it as proof that the University continues to stay ahead of the curve.

A person speaks into a NYSE microphone on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, surrounded by trading screens and financial displays.
Dan Zhang shown during a New York Stock Exchange interview in 2025, when  ClickUp announced crossing $300 million in Annual Recurring Revenue, a metric used to measure the predictable, repeating revenue a company generates over a year. 

“I already learned how to learn from Syracuse and Maxwell,” Zhang said. “That is an evergreen, lifelong skill set.”

Paying It Forward

When a Maxwell development officer reached out about giving back, Zhang says it felt like a full-circle moment.

“I came to the U.S. as a poor international student on a teaching assistant scholarship from Syracuse,” she said. “I'll never forget how the Maxwell School opened that first door for me. It changed the trajectory of my life. I am honored to help create that same opportunity for others.”

Dean David M. Van Slyke said Zhang’s story is a reminder of what is possible when talent meets opportunity. “She arrived with determination and a willingness to embrace every aspect of her interdisciplinary education, and she has transformed that experience into extraordinary professional success,” he said. “What makes her journey especially meaningful to us is that she has not forgotten where it began. Her generosity speaks to the very best of the Maxwell community, and we are deeply grateful that she is helping to open doors for the next generation of students.”

Zhang’s gift is designed to do more than cover costs. It is meant to send a message to students. “It is not just financial support,” Zhang said. “It is a signal that someone sees you. You come to Syracuse, you come to Maxwell, you want to build your dream and your life here—someone sees you, believes in you and wants you to succeed.”

She thinks often about how fragile those early days were. An unexpected medical bill, a family emergency, a visa complication—any one of those things could have changed everything. The Maxwell Student Emergency Support Fund exists precisely for those moments.

“One timely act of support can really change the trajectory of someone’s entire life,” she said. “I know because I lived it.”

The Maxwell Student Emergency Support Fund

Join Dan Zhang ’11 M.A. (Soc) in supporting the Maxwell Student Emergency Fund, which helps undergraduate and graduate students facing urgent needs including emergency travel, food, housing, visa issues and tuition. Contributions can be made online: Cuse Community - Maxwell – Gift Info


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