# Federation ## [What is a federated network?](https://www.vmware.com/topics/glossary/content/federated-network.html) Article by [[VMware]] ### What is the difference between federated and distributed networks? The terms federated network and distributed network have some overlap and are sometimes used interchangeably, but there is a key difference between them. A distributed network is simply any network that encompasses multiple geographical locations, whereas a federated network is one that allows multiple networks (which may be geographically distributed) to work together by employing technologies such as network federation. A true federated network uses a central management framework to enforce consistent policies and create a uniform environment so that the member networks can share services. ### Key benefits of federated networks - **Streamlined operations:** Administrators manage a federated network as a single entity and set policies for the entire federated network, rather than separately for each network. This allows organizations to easily achieve a uniform environment with less IT overhead. - **Visibility:** Centralized management of [data centers](https://www.vmware.com/topics/glossary/content/data-center.html) and cloud environments allows total visibility into those environments, without the gaps or problems that plague less streamlined architectures in which each component must be managed individually.  - **Consistency:** In a federated network, each member network operates as part of a unified whole, creating a consistent user experience and making the network easier to manage. - **Interoperability:** A federated network allows seamless exchange of data and services across its member networks. This is particularly important in federated multi-cloud environments, where differences between public cloud providers would otherwise pose barriers to smooth interoperability. - **Security:** Security policy management is prone to user error because of the inherent complexity of managing multiple networks or data centers. By managing those environments together as a single federated network, IT teams reduce the possibility of errors and improve their security posture. ## Why federated networks matter A federated network provides the consistency, interoperability, and access controls needed to deploy and enforce networking and security policies across multiple networks. As business pressures demand app modernization and faster time to market, a lack of integration across data centers and cloud environments can create visibility gaps and configuration inefficiencies that make management of networking and security policies time-consuming and prone to errors. Federated networks support these business-critical initiatives by providing consistent and efficient policy deployment and enforcement across various administration domains or multiple sites within a single administration domain.