In our final presentation "Mexico’s Two Speed Economy," we aimed to present to Mexico government our solution to tackle the problem of ‘two speed economy’. The biggest problem we want to point out to the audience is the huge division in productivity between the modern Mexico, a high speed economy and the traditional Mexico, a land of slow growing small and informal businesses. However, this problem statement is not self-explanatory as productivity gap between modern and traditional businesses is not rare in developing economies, and so why is it a serious problem for Mexico? The reason is that the unproductive traditional sector is expanding, attracting and engaging more than 80 percent of the workforce in Mexico. In order to find out the solution to this problem, we need to dig deeper in the underlying reasons for the low productivity and informality resides in the traditional businesses sector. In order to deliver a concise and clear presentation to the audience, we divide the presentation into three parts: problem stating, problem analysis and solution generation. Problem stating part provides a big picture for the audience on the ‘two speed economy’ of Mexico and offers the elaboration on the ‘two speed economy’. Problem analysis part evaluates the underlying reasons that generate the low productivity within traditional sectors. For example, the lack of incentives for small business to formalize due to high registration cost. Finally, we identified several ways that government can step in and help solve this problem. In this paper, I will reflect on how we structured the flow of this presentation and explained the issue to our audience and then I will discuss on the different presentation techniques we applied in this presentation. When we discussed about how to present this complex topic, we faced two major challenges. Frist, how to present this problem concisely and clearly to make the audience get the idea of the