For most small businesses, marketing isn’t a system. It’s a collection of disconnected pieces—some Facebook ads here, an email campaign there, maybe a funnel that hasn’t been updated in two years. The result is predictable: inconsistent leads, wasted ad spend, and revenue that feels more like luck than strategy.
Triangle AI Systems was built to fix that problem. The company operates as what it calls a “marketing engineering” firm, installing complete revenue systems for small and mid-sized businesses instead of selling them isolated services. The focus is on creating what founder PJ Sharma describes as a “Conversion Infrastructure”—a unified approach that connects creative, offers, follow-up, and buyer psychology into one cohesive engine.
Sharma brings 15 years of experience to the model, having managed over $30 million in advertising spend and helped generate more than $100 million in client revenue. His central thesis: most businesses don’t have a marketing problem. They have a systems problem.
Post-Andromeda Advertising and the Shift Toward Smarter Creative
The company’s approach is built around Meta’s Andromeda update, a shift in how the platform’s AI evaluates and distributes ads. Traditional agencies are still catching up. Triangle has designed its AI-powered customer journey systems to work within this new environment, using creative and targeting strategies that align with how the algorithm now prioritizes content.
The difference shows up in results. Triangle reports that its clients typically see conversion rates double or triple within 90 days. That’s not from spending more—it’s from building systems that treat every stage of the buyer journey as part of a connected process, rather than isolated tactics.

A National Expansion Built on Predictable Growth
Triangle’s client base spans home services, real estate, insurance, medical practices, and other service-based industries. The sweet spot: businesses earning between $500,000 and $10 million annually who are ready to move past referral-based growth and want something more reliable.
The company’s long-term vision is to become the most trusted growth partner for small businesses across the country. That means continuing to refine the systems that produce consistent results and staying ahead of platform changes that leave most agencies scrambling. With over 400 marketing strategies built and tested, Triangle’s model is less about theory and more about repeatable execution.
As AI continues to reshape digital advertising, the gap between businesses that understand these systems and those that don’t will only widen. Triangle’s bet is that small businesses shouldn’t need a massive in-house team or a seven-figure ad budget to compete. They just need a performance-driven marketing infrastructure that actually works.
The future of marketing, according to Triangle, isn’t about doing more. It’s about building better systems. And for small businesses tired of guessing their way through growth, that shift can’t come soon enough. Triangle is positioning itself at the center of that transition, helping businesses install the kind of predictable revenue engines that used to be available only to enterprise brands.


