AI Solutions Engineer
Pinnacle Growth Consulting (PGC) is seeking an AI Solutions Engineer to build and commercialize agentic AI products. The role encompasses the full lifecycle from MVP development and automation to GTM planning and content-led growth. Candidates must have a track record of shipping AI agents and translating technical capabilities into business value. This is a hybrid cross-functional position requiring both engineering and marketing acumen.
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Experience
2-6 years
Function
Product Management
Work mode
Hybrid, India
Company
Tier 3
What you will work on
Pinnacle Growth Consulting (PGC) is seeking an AI Solutions Engineer to build and commercialize agentic AI products. The role encompasses the full lifecycle from MVP development and automation to GTM planning and content-led growth. Candidates must have a track record of shipping AI agents and translating technical capabilities into business value. This is a hybrid cross-functional position requiring both engineering and marketing acumen.
TAL's take
Small company with an ambiguous 'AI builder' role that blends product, engineering, and marketing, making it a kitchen-sink role at a tier-3 consultancy.
Role spans product development, automation engineering, marketing, and sales, making it extremely broad and poorly defined.
Must haves
- Experience taking products from idea to market
- Understanding of GTM strategy and product positioning
- Proven experience building agentic AI products or workflows
- Strong portfolio of shipped AI products or automations
- IIT Graduation
Tools and skills
About the company
Small consultancy or unbranded agency with limited information available on engineering scale or product footprint.
Posts mentioning Pinnacle Growth Consulting (PGC)
Cracking faangm interview is the pinnacle of success or just a show off???
Is cracking faangm interview the pinnacle of success? Why are folks showing off so much as if they have done something significantly great. Isn’t it another job, just job? I have met many people working in normal companies, but their work is really impressive. They have many real world problems/solutions to discuss, apart from dsa and system designs. Most faangm folks just talk about dsa and interview preparation. Have hardly seen anyone talking about the real work they do. At max, they make course and start advertising.
Lady Rajinikanth -Part 2
There was a time when I had to make a big decision—whether to leave my hometown for a new city and pursue engineering at a top-tier college that started in Goa or stay in the familiar comfort of home and attend a tier 3 college. It wasn’t a decision I really struggled with. My family, protective and loving, felt I was safest staying in the city. I had never lived away from home, and at that time, the comfort of being close to them felt right. It wasn’t a tough choice—I just went with the flow, content in my family’s nest. By the 3rd year of college, I was focused on either landing a campus job or preparing for my master’s, but fate had its own plans. That’s when I met someone who would change everything. A guy who, to my surprise, became not just a part of my life, but my life partner. And even now, I’m beyond grateful for that unexpected turn. I still remember those sweet, teenage moments of love—the ones that made me feel like I was living a dream. Looking back, they still bring a rush of emotion, and I feel like I truly deserve those memories. I recommend everyone to find love in early years of life no metrics were involved then, it's all infatuation but with some applid logic. He wasn’t just my love; he was also my biggest motivator. He believed in me and fueled my dreams, pushing me to chase my goals with everything I had. We both had our ambitions, and together, we made plans for the future. Eventually, I chose to join Infosys. I trained in Mysore, moved to new cities, and was living a reality I once only dreamed of. At the time, all I wanted was a job with a 15k per month salary. That seemed like it would be the pinnacle of my success. Fast forward to today, and while I’m earning a six-figure salary, there’s still that feeling—that insatiable drive—that I haven’t quite “arrived” yet. And I realize that’s the beauty of having a growth mindset. After a year of work, both of us were on our own career paths, building toward our futures. That’s when we decided to get married. I was 22, he was 24. And it was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made. Thanks for reading.
Interesting!
As technology progresses and leads us to believe that we are at the pinnacle of the world, death will find advanced and unique ways to take us out.