Ruby then says, do something about this, I need to be able to print these documents by close of day so Caleb can have it shipped first thing in the morning. The Network guy says to Ruby, there seem to be a problem! The departments are not allowed to speak with each other. She then decides to get the IT guy to give her access to the Printer in the Marketing department. Suzy has just realised that the Publication Printer is in the Marketing Department and due to the sensitive nature of the document, she only wants to print the relevant pages and so cannot it to Caleb. Ruby works in the Production(VLAN 10) and needs Caleb who works in Marketing(VLAN 20) to pick up an important publication first thing on Tuesday morning. Logical because, with VLANS, a number of interfaces on the switch which represents the users end devices or host machines are grouped logically so they are independent and securely contained away from unexpected broadcasts(announcements). It is a simple defacto but not the best approach if you have departments and wants their dealings to be contained in their logical space. Traditionally, most small businesses have users connected via a Switch in one Broadcast Domain (see Figure 1.0 above) which enables all devices on the network to speak with each other.