Dan J. Wang
Research Interests
Biographical Note
Dan Wang is Lambert Family Professor of Social Enterprise and (by courtesy) Sociology at Columbia Business School, where he is also the Co-Director of the Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change. He is also the creator of CAiSEY, a voice-powered AI discussion partner that strengthens students’ critical thinking skills and engagement in the classroom, used by instructors and students in universities across the world.
His research examines how social networks drive social and economic transformation through the analysis of global migration, social movements, organizational innovation, and entrepreneurship. He teaches the core MBA Strategy Formulation course, an elective MBA course on Technology Strategy, and a PhD seminar on Organizational Theory. In Executive Education, he co-directs the Executive Development Program, and teaches modules on Social Networks, Technology Strategy, and Business & Social Activism. He earned his BA from Columbia University (Columbia College) and PhD from Stanford University.
In 2024 and 2018, he was awarded with the Singhvi Prize for Scholarship in the Classroom, Columbia Business School’s annual top teaching honor conferred by the graduating MBA class. In 2025, he received the Dean's Award for Innovation in the Curriculum, for his integration of AI in the classroom. He has also received the 2020 Dean’s Award for Excellence in Teaching in the Core, and was named to Poets and Quants’ 2018 list of “Best 40 Business School Professors under 40.” In 2021, he received the Robert W. Lear Service Award, given by the graduating class for his commitment to the MBA student body.
Wang’s research lies at the intersection of business and society with a focus on innovation and entrepreneurship, and how they are shaped by broader social forces such as global migration and social protest. His current work focuses on inclusive entrepreneurship to understand how novel organizational forms and tactics empower marginalized and disadvantaged groups to engage in venture creation and investment. In addition, he has developed new work about the social and normative forces that govern the adoption of AI technologies within organizations and across society. In past work, he has studied global migration of high-skilled individuals, focusing on “reverse brain drain”, or how the return migration of skilled professionals spreads ideas, technologies, and new ventures to different parts of the world. Another research area has looked at how social activism creates an interface between business and society. In this work, Wang analyzed collaboration networks across social movements to predict innovation, knowledge sharing, strategic choices, and protest scope across activist groups. Finally, he has analyzed the implications of different network structures of venture capital syndication for the innovation output and financial performance of start-ups.
His work has been published in Administrative Science Quarterly, Academy of Management Journal, American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, Annual Review of Sociology, Journal of Applied Psychology, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Social Forces, Social Networks, Strategic Management Journal, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, and Theory and Society. He currently serves as an Associate Editor for Administrative Science Quarterly, and previously has served as Associate Editor for the Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue Editor for Organization Science, and Consulting Editor for The American Journal of Sociology. His work has been cited in The New York Times, Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal, and NPR and has been recognized with multiple awards from the Academy of Management. He has also been awarded both the Dissertation (2012) and Junior Faculty Fellowship (2017) from the Kauffman Foundation. He has also contributed to practitioner-oriented publications such as Strategy+Business, and written Op-Eds for CNN.
Education
BA, Columbia University, 2007
MA, Stanford University, 2008
PhD, Stanford University, 2013