The Cisco Business 350 Series Switches, integral to the Cisco Business network solutions portfolio, offer an affordable range of managed switches essential for small office networks. Their intuitive dashboard streamlines network setup, advanced features facilitate digital transformation, and comprehensive security safeguards critical business transactions.
Strong Security
The Cisco Business 350 Series Switches offer sophisticated security features to safeguard your business data and prevent unauthorized users from accessing your network.
Advanced network security applications like IEEE 802.1X and port security ensure strict access control to specific areas of your network. Web-based authentication offers a unified interface for verifying all types of host devices and operating systems, eliminating the need to install IEEE 802.1X clients on each endpoint.
Sophisticated defense mechanisms, such as dynamic Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) inspection, IP Source Guard, and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) snooping, identify and prevent intentional network attacks. These protocols, when used together, are known as IP-MAC port binding (IPMB).
IPv6 First Hop Security enhances advanced threat protection for IPv6 networks. This robust security suite includes ND inspection, RA guard, DHCPv6 guard, and neighbor binding integrity check, offering exceptional defense against a wide range of address spoofing and man-in-the-middle attacks in IPv6 environments.
True stacking
The Cisco Business 350 Series switches offer genuine stacking functionality, enabling you to configure, manage, and troubleshoot all switches in the stack as a single unit using just one IP address.
A true stack offers a unified data, control, and management plane, allowing the entire stack to function as a single entity with all member ports acting together. This enhances flexibility, scalability, and ease of use, significantly reducing complexity in expanding networks while boosting the resilience and availability of network applications. True stacking also delivers cost savings and administrative advantages, including cross-stack QoS, VLANs, LAGs, and port mirroring—features that clustered switches cannot provide.