College of Economic and Management Sciences
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INNOVATION MANAGEMENT:
Module Code: MNE3703
Module Name: Innovation Management
Student Name: [Student Name]
Student Number: [Student Number]
Assignment No.: 02
Due Date: March 2026
Semester: Semester 1, 2026
Unique Number: [Unique Number]
,UNISA | MNE3703 Innovation Management – BrewBot & Long Waves
Question 1: BrewBot Cafe – Product and Service Innovation
1.1 Product Innovation and Service Innovation: Definitions and Case Study Examples
Product innovation is the introduction of a good or service that is new, or significantly im-
proved in terms of its characteristics, components, materials, or intended uses (Anderson,
Potocnik and Zhou, 2014). Product innovation can be radical, creating an entirely new cate-
gory, or incremental, meaningfully enhancing an existing offering.
In the BrewBot case, the Smart Brews range is a clear example of product innovation. These
are coffee blends infused with adaptogens – natural substances believed to help the body
adapt to stress – developed in collaboration with local herbalists and nutritionists and tai-
lored to four functional needs: energy, focus, relaxation, and immunity. This innovation did
not merely improve existing coffee; it created a new product category by combining a main-
stream beverage format with functional health ingredients. The cross-disciplinary collabora-
tion with herbalists and nutritionists ensured that the formulations were grounded in domain
expertise, strengthening both the product’s credibility and its differentiation from generic
wellness drinks.
Service innovation is the introduction of a new or substantially changed service concept,
customer interaction model, or service delivery mechanism that creates meaningful value for
the customer and the firm (Anderson et al., 2014). Service innovations often alter the process
of service delivery rather than solely its tangible output.
In the BrewBot case, the AI-powered mobile application is a clear example of service inno-
vation. The app uses artificial intelligence to personalise drink recommendations based on
the customer’s mood, local weather, and purchase history. It also enables pre-ordering, accu-
mulates loyalty points, and offers virtual barista consultations. These features fundamentally
transform the service relationship from a one-off, in-store transaction into an ongoing, dig-
itally mediated, personalised engagement. The AI layer enables personalisation at scale,
delivering an individualised experience to each customer without requiring additional human
labour.
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, UNISA | MNE3703 Innovation Management – BrewBot & Long Waves
Key Distinction
Product Innovation vs Service Innovation: Product innovation concerns what is de-
livered – the Smart Brews line. Service innovation concerns how the experience is
structured and delivered – the AI-powered app. These two types of innovation are
complementary: a compelling product benefits from an engaging delivery channel,
and a personalised service channel is most effective when it has a differentiated prod-
uct range to recommend (Anderson et al., 2014). BrewBot combined both, which is a
significant strategic advantage.
1.2 How BrewBot Benefited from Combining Product and Service Innovations
Point 1: Compounding Effect on Customer Retention. The combination of a functionally dif-
ferentiated product range and an AI-powered personalisation engine created a compounding
retention effect that neither innovation could have achieved independently. The app matched
specific Smart Brew variants to each customer’s real-time context, transforming the prod-
uct from a generic health drink into a personally curated recommendation. Customers who
experienced a consistently satisfying outcome across multiple visits developed a habitual
association between the app and value delivery, which is a much more durable form of loyalty
than product satisfaction alone (Anderson et al., 2014). The 25 per cent increase in customer
retention within six months reflects this combined effect.
Point 2: Expanded Revenue and Data Streams. The service innovation created a digital en-
gagement layer that generated revenue and behavioural data independently of individual drink
purchases. Loyalty points incentivised repeat visits; pre-ordering improved throughput and re-
duced wait times; and virtual barista consultations created a premium service tier at marginal
cost. The 40 per cent growth in app usage over six months indicates that the service channel
itself became a product that customers valued, not merely a utility for ordering coffee. This
digital asset, once built, provides BrewBot with proprietary customer data that can be used to
further refine product development and target marketing, creating a self-reinforcing cycle of
innovation (James et al., 2013).
1.3 The Biggest Challenge from BrewBot’s Traditional Customer Base
The most significant challenge from the traditional customer base was the alienation caused
by the technology-intensive nature of the service innovation. Long-standing customers who
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