These micro or small SMEs usually are those of family business-based with workshops at their houses, or kinships of craftswomen/craftsmen, with or without (usually) small showrooms. Furthermore, the names they usually use as trademarks are sometimes originally functioned as trade names. Therefore, they did not create the names specifically to meet the criteria of a good trademark, such as having distinguishing signs or distinctive names. The products they made usually are also based on other SMEs’, such as traders or showrooms, orders in which the trademark labels of those SMEs will be attached to the products as per their requests. In this case, the trademarks that the micro or small SMEs have cannot effectively be utilized in their products, and the trademarks only function as trade names by which other SMEs can recognize them among other similar micro or small SMEs. This is sometimes unfortunate, since the micro or small business can actually produce a good quality and characterized products; and without the use of their own labels, in which other SMEs then put their labels on the products, the one getting advantage from the product quality (and reputation), are those SMEs who made the orders, and not the micro/small SMEs producing batik.