Rodosto Teknoloji is now a member of the Esri Partner Network. For the municipalities, utilities, and enterprises we work with, that means certified access to the full ArcGIS platform, a direct channel to the company behind the technology, and an independent signal that the engineering standard we hold ourselves to is real. Here is what the membership is, what it changes, and what it deliberately does not.
We will state it plainly: Rodosto Teknoloji is a member of the Esri Partner Network. Rodosto has built on the ArcGIS platform since the day the company was founded — the expertise was always there. What is new is that the relationship is now formal, recognized, and verifiable by the people who matter most: the procurement officers, GIS managers, and information-security reviewers who decide which vendor a public agency or enterprise will trust with its spatial infrastructure.
An announcement like this can easily become a vanity post. We would rather it be useful. So this is not a celebration — it is an explanation of what the membership actually means for an organization deciding whether to work with us.

What the Esri Partner Network Is
Esri is the company behind ArcGIS — the platform that the majority of serious municipal, utility, and government GIS programs run on. The Esri Partner Network is Esri’s global program of organizations that design solutions, deliver services, and build products on that platform. It is a vetted relationship, not a directory listing. Membership ties a firm into Esri’s technical resources, release cadence, and partner channels.
For a buyer evaluating a GIS vendor, the membership answers one specific and reasonable question: is this firm recognized by the company that makes the platform it claims expertise in? A consultancy can describe itself however it likes on its own website. Membership in the Esri Partner Network is a statement made by a third party — and third-party statements are the only ones that carry weight in a procurement file.

Why This Matters for the Organizations We Serve
The membership is not an abstraction. It changes four concrete things about how a project with Rodosto runs.
1. Certified Access to the Full ArcGIS Platform
ArcGIS is not a single product. It is a platform — ArcGIS Enterprise, ArcGIS Online, ArcGIS Pro, Experience Builder, the developer SDKs, and the geoprocessing and automation surfaces around them. Partner membership means Rodosto works with current, licensed, supported access to that full platform. Solutions are engineered, tested, and validated against the real software an agency will run in production — not against an approximation of it.
2. A Direct Channel to the Vendor
Every non-trivial GIS project eventually hits a platform-level question — a deprecation, an undocumented limit, a behavior that needs confirmation from the source. As an Esri Partner Network member, Rodosto reaches Esri’s technical and partner resources through an established channel rather than waiting on a public forum. For the client, that is the difference between a blocker that stalls a phase and a question that is answered and closed.
3. Current Platform Knowledge
ArcGIS evolves on a fast release cadence. Capabilities are added, patterns are deprecated, and the recommended architecture shifts from one version to the next. Partner status keeps Rodosto inside that release stream — early visibility into what is changing, what is being retired, and where the platform is heading. An architecture we design today is built to be defensible against the platform of the next few years, not just the current one.
4. An Independent Credibility Signal
For public-sector buyers in particular, “Esri Partner Network member” is a line that a procurement committee, a council, or an auditor recognizes without needing it explained. It does not replace technical evaluation — nothing does — but it removes a category of doubt early in the process. It tells a cautious buyer that the firm in front of them operates inside the platform’s recognized ecosystem.