Fear Is a Feeling Too: The Ethics of UFP
A mother in Chennai watches an insurance commercial. A father in Chicago does the same. Different continents. Same tightening in the chest.
Cut to another screen.
A baby shampoo ad. Foam. Laughter. A promise of “no tears.” Shoulders soften.
Both ads are doing the same thing. They are not selling policies or pH balance. They are selling feelings.
Fifteen or so years ago at ISD Global, we heart crafted this concept and branded it as UFP: Unique Feelings Proposition. While the world obsessed over USP, the rational claim, we focused on the visceral imprint. USP answers “Why you?” UFP answers “How will I feel because of you?”
Insurance frightens you. Baby shampoo reassures you. Both are UFPs.
The uncomfortable question is this: Are both ethical?
The razor-edge ethics of emotional branding
This is where UFPs aren’t just feelings—they’re atomic warheads. Research from neuro-marketing pioneers like Gerald Zaltman (Harvard) shows emotions drive 95% of buying decisions. But here’s the gut-punch: The most potent UFP? Relief from fear. A 2023 Journal of Consumer Psychology study confirms it—fear spikes cortisol, relief floods dopamine. Brands hijacking this? Pure rocket fuel. And pure peril.
The Ethical Bloodbath: Inspiration vs. Manipulation
When does “inspiring” someone to be a better parent become “manipulating” them into buying snake oil?Let’s look at the PolicyBazaar backlash. Their UFP was supposed to be “Responsibility.” But the feeling they broadcast was “Guilt and Shame.” The audience didn’t feel relieved; they felt violated. They felt the manipulation. Because the feeling wasn’t true to the brand’s soul—it was a shortcut to a quick sale .
Contrast that with a masterstroke in ethical UFP: Hyundai during the 2008 financial crisis. While the world was paralyzed by fear of losing their jobs and their cars, Hyundai launched the Assurance Program. They didn’t sell you on horsepower. They sold you on the feeling that if you lost your job, you could return the car without ruining your credit. They met fear with empathy, not just incentives .That is the difference between a transaction and a relationship.
The UFP Litmus Test
So, how do you know if your brand is healing a wound or just picking at the scab? For 15 years, ISD Global has argued that a UFP must be rooted in Brand Truth, not Brand Gimmick. Emotion AI is now sophisticated enough to read our micro-expressions . Marketers can now tweak campaigns in real-time to exploit our deepest insecurities. Just because you can trigger a fear response doesn’t mean you should.
The line is simple: Are you making the consumer feel capable, or are you making them feel broken?
Manipulation says: “You are incomplete without me. Buy this or you will fail.”
Inspiration says: “You are already amazing. Let me give you a tool to feel even better.”
The Relief Economy
Behavioural science gives us a blunt truth. Humans are loss averse. According to Daniel Kahneman’s work on prospect theory, losses loom larger than gains. Fear is neurologically sticky. Relief from fear releases dopamine. That release is powerful. Addictive, even.
This is why the most potent emotional lever in branding is not joy. It is relief.
Look at Life Insurance Corporation of India campaigns in the early 2000s. Stark visuals of uncertainty followed by the comfort of “Zindagi ke saath bhi, zindagi ke baad bhi.” Fear of instability, followed by relief.
Globally, Allianz has often dramatized risk scenarios before positioning itself as the safety net. The architecture is consistent. Trigger vulnerability. Offer sanctuary.
Now contrast that with Johnson & Johnson baby products in India. The UFP is gentleness. The emotional journey is not from fear to relief. It is from care to trust.
Different emotional arcs. Same strategic intent.
The Thin Ethical Line
Fear based branding crosses into manipulation when three things happen:
- The fear is exaggerated beyond realistic probability.
- The solution is positioned as exclusive salvation.
- The consumer is deprived of agency.
Consider certain global cybersecurity ads that imply apocalypse without their software. Or fairness cream ads in India from a decade ago that weaponized social insecurity before regulatory pushback reshaped the narrative. The UFP there was not aspiration. It was inadequacy.
On the other side, there are brands like Tata Trusts that address sanitation or healthcare gaps without sensationalism. The emotion evoked is concern, but also collective responsibility. The viewer is invited to participate, not panic.
Ethical emotional branding informs. It does not intimidate. It empowers. It does not entrap.
The UFP vs USP Divide
USP is transactional. UFP is transformational.
USP says: 2 percent lower premium. UFP says: Sleep better at night.
USP says: Tear free formula. UFP says: You are a good parent.
The danger lies in forgetting that feelings are not decorative. They are directional. They shape belief systems, cultural norms, even public behaviour.
During the pandemic, some brands amplified anxiety to drive urgency. Others like Amul used topical humour to diffuse collective stress. Same crisis. Radically different UFP choices.
Which one strengthened long term trust?
Research from Edelman’s Trust Barometer repeatedly shows that trust is now a primary buying filter across demographics. Trust is cumulative. Fear is combustible. Use too much of it, and the brand may win the quarter but lose the decade.
The ISD Global Ethical Brand Score
At SOHB Story, we believe every brand must audit its emotional footprint. Here is a distilled version of the ISD Global Ethical Brand Score. Ask yourself:
- Does our communication amplify fear beyond data?
- Is the relief we promise realistic?
- Are we presenting choice or cornering emotion?
- Would we show this ad to our own family with pride?
- Is our UFP aligned to a larger social good?
- Are we reinforcing harmful stereotypes?
- Does our narrative build long term trust?
- Are we transparent about limitations?
- Would this emotion still feel appropriate ten years from now?
- Are we creating courage or dependency?
Score yourself brutally.
Because the most powerful emotional branding tool is also the sharpest blade in the drawer.
As We Close, A Subtle Provocation
At ISD Global, our work over the past decade and a half has revolved around decoding and designing UFPs that elevate rather than exploit. The conversations we are now having with progressive brands are not about louder claims. They are about cleaner consciences.
Fear is a feeling too. But so are dignity, confidence, belonging and hope.
The future belongs to brands that choose wisely.
And before your next campaign, take the 10 question ISD Global Ethical Brand Score Test shared above 👆.
PS: On a completely different note, I am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as well. You can access it on these links below:
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SOHBStory/videos
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3POSy0dixh5r7TjOFgfC4e
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DT8D70FDWms/?igsh=MWc4enNzaXBhaHQzOA==


