Mohamed Elmensi
About Mohamed Elmensi
Mohamed Elmensi is a Back End PHP Developer with extensive experience in software development and automation. He has worked with various companies in the Paris region and currently contributes to Vestiaire Collective, focusing on microservices architecture and system performance.
Work at Vestiaire Collective
Currently, Mohamed Elmensi serves as a Développeur Back-end PHP at Vestiaire Collective, a position he has held since 2021. His role involves significant contributions to the platform's architecture and performance. He played a key role in the agile conversion squad, focusing on microservices architecture. Elmensi has introduced functional testing and automated release processes, integrating tools like Jira and Slack for enhanced communication. He has also created DataDog dashboards and alerts to monitor system performance, ensuring reliability across the platform.
Education and Expertise
Mohamed Elmensi studied at the Institut supérieur d'informatique, where he earned a Licence Appliquée in Systèmes Informatiques et Logiciels from 2009 to 2012. He furthered his education at the same institution, achieving an Engineer's degree in Génie Logiciel et Systèmes Informatiques (GLSI) from 2012 to 2015. His academic background provides a solid foundation in software development and system architecture, which he applies in his professional roles.
Background
Before joining Vestiaire Collective, Mohamed Elmensi accumulated diverse experience in software development. He worked as a Freelance Software Developer in Tunisia in 2010. He then held positions at CAPA Invest as a Consultant for application test automation from 2015 to 2016, and at Maltem Consulting Group as a Software Development Engineer from 2016 to 2018. Elmensi continued his career at Consort NT as a Software Development Engineer from 2018 to 2022, where he focused on various software solutions.
Achievements
During his career, Mohamed Elmensi has developed significant software solutions, including an automatic VAT declaration system for sales in Europe. At Consort NT, he implemented a microservice for collecting sales data in the US and Canada. He migrated payment logos from NetApp to AWS S3, enhancing cloud infrastructure. At Vestiaire Collective, he transformed daemons into Kubernetes workers and optimized the performance of cronjobs and API endpoints, contributing to the platform's scalability and efficiency.