Artem Kuznetsov is a Senior PHP Developer with over 10 years of experience building full-stack web applications and leading teams from Kyiv, Ukraine. He combines strong backend expertise in PHP (Laravel) and SQL with modern front-end skills—TypeScript, Vue/React/Angular, Redux and responsive CSS—enabling him to own features end-to-end. As a former Technical Lead and current senior engineer at HURMA System, he’s comfortable both mentoring teams and shipping production code under pressure. Artem contributes to open-source (notably enhancing the vue-snotify notification library’s components, docs and async behavior), showing attention to UX details that often sit outside typical backend roles. Colleagues describe him as disciplined, punctual and collaborative, able to bridge design, tooling and deployment concerns across the stack.
10 years of coding experience
6 years of employment as a software developer
Specialist, Computer networks and telecommunications, 4, Specialist, Computer networks and telecommunications, 4 at National Aviation University
Software Development, 11\12, Software Development, 11\12 at ITStep
Contributions:9 releases, 110 commits, 9 PRs in 1 year 3 months
Contributions summary:Artem primarily contributed to the development of the `vue-snotify` library, focusing on its component and styling aspects. Their work included adding demo applications, fixing issues related to asynchronous toasts, and setting up recompilation processes for source changes. The user also implemented documentation improvements and added custom class names for buttons, which enhanced the library's overall functionality and user experience.
Contributions:18 releases, 224 commits, 12 PRs in 2 years 11 months
centerangular5ng-snotifyangular4notifications
Find and Hire Top DevelopersWe’ve analyzed the programming source code of over 60 million software developers on GitHub and scored them by 50,000 skills. Sign-up on Prog,AI to search for software developers.
Request Free Trial
Artem Kuznetsov - Senior PHP Developer at HURMA System