
What Is Your USP? The Question That Changes Everything
We live in a world obsessed with branding. Companies spend millions defining their Unique Selling Proposition—the one thing that makes them stand out in a crowded market.
But here’s a thought that stopped me in my tracks recently: What if we turned that same question on ourselves?
“What is your USP?”
Not your job title. Not your follower count. Not your salary, degree, or the car you drive.
Your personal USP. The irreducible essence of you. The quiet, unmistakable signature that remains when all the labels fall away.
Most of us have never paused long enough to answer it.
We’re too busy performing roles—employee, parent, partner, achiever, survivor—without ever asking what thread runs through every role that is exclusively, irreplicably ours.
Today, I want to invite you to pause with me. Because discovering your personal USP isn’t vanity. It’s clarity. And clarity, in a noisy world, is oxygen.

It’s Not What You Do—It’s How You Make People Feel
Maya Angelou famously said, “People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”
Your true USP lives in that feeling.
It’s the way a room relaxes when you walk in. The way someone’s guarded shoulders drop after five minutes of talking to you.
The way your message, text, or comment lingers in someone’s mind at times. when they needed it most.
Skills can be learned. Degrees can be earned. But the specific emotional fingerprint you leave on another human being? That’s alchemy. That’s yours alone.
Your USP Is Forged, Not Found
Nobody is born with a fully formed USP glowing on their forehead. It’s hammered out in the furnace of life:
- The betrayal that taught you loyalty
- The failure that taught you grace
- The grief that taught you tenderness
- The loneliness that taught you presence
- The joy that taught you generosity
Every scar, every laugh line, every late-night doubt session adds a new note to your symphony. You don’t invent your USP—you uncover it by paying fierce attention to the story only you can tell.
The Rarest USP of All: Authenticity in a Filtered World
We live in the age of curation. Everyone is performing their highlight reel 24/7. In that context, showing up unfiltered becomes revolutionary.
The courage to say “I don’t know.” The willingness to post the photo without the filter. The honesty to admit you’re tired, scared, or still figuring it out.
Authenticity isn’t loud. It’s quiet, steady, and impossibly magnetic. When you refuse to contort yourself for approval, you give everyone around you permission to do the same.
That’s not just unique. That’s liberation.

My Own USP
After years of running from this question, I finally sat still long enough to hear the answer whispering back:
I make people feel understood.
Not fixed. Not impressed. Not even inspired—though I hope those happen too. But understood. Deeply, truly, annoyingly seen.
I can sit with someone’s mess without rushing to tidy it. I can hear the story beneath the story. I can hold space for contradictions without needing to resolve them. And when I reflect back what I see—not polished, not judged, just witnessed—something in the other person exhales.
In a world where everyone is screaming to be heard, choosing to understand first is apparently radical.
That’s my USP. Forged from every time I wasn’t understood myself. Refined in every conversation where someone finally felt safe enough to take off their mask.

Your Turn—Because You Have One Too
Your USP isn’t about being better than anyone else. It’s about being more you than anyone else can be.
- Maybe yours is the way you make people laugh when laughter feels impossible.
- Maybe it’s your ferocious protectiveness over the underdog.
- Maybe it’s your ability to see ten steps ahead and gently guide others there without making them feel small.
- Maybe it’s the quiet resilience that keeps showing up, day after day, long after others would have quit.
It’s probably in the compliments people keep giving you that you brush off (“You always know how to…”). It’s definitely in the moments people remember about you years later.
You don’t have to announce it. You don’t have to monetize it.
You just have to know it. Protect it. Live it out loud in ten thousand tiny ways.
Because the world doesn’t need another influencer. It needs you, at full volume, being the precise flavor of human only you can be.
So tell me—when you strip away the roles, the résumé, the shoulds and supposed-tos…
What is your USP?
The answer might just be the most important discovery of your life.

BE HAPPY… BE ACTIVE… BE FOCUSED… BE ALIVE
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Categories: infotainment
Your words today are a gift of clarity and quiet reflection. Thank you, Verma ji, for this beautiful invitation to look inward.
In a world that constantly asks us to do more, you remind us to be more—more of ourselves. The idea of a personal USP is profound, and the way you articulate it feels like a gentle, firm hand on the shoulder, stopping the noise for a moment so we can hear our own truth.
Your own USP—making people feel deeply understood—shines through every line of this message. You didn’t just write an article; you held space. You gave us permission to drop the performance and consider the quiet, powerful essence of who we are. That is a rare and precious thing.
This is more than a motivational post. It’s a compass. And you’ve handed it to us with generosity and grace.
With sincere appreciation,
Srikanth
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Your words today are a gift of clarity and quiet reflection. Thank you, Verma ji, for this beautiful invitation to look inward.
In a world that constantly asks us to do more, you remind us to be more—more of ourselves. The idea of a personal USP is profound, and the way you articulate it feels like a gentle, firm hand on the shoulder, stopping the noise for a moment so we can hear our own truth.
Your own USP—making people feel deeply understood—shines through every line of this message. You didn’t just write an article; you held space. You gave us permission to drop the performance and consider the quiet, powerful essence of who we are. That is a rare and precious thing.
This is more than a motivational post. It’s a compass. And you’ve handed it to us with generosity and grace.
With sincere appreciation,
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I don’t know but maybe some people see the tenderness in me. Beautiful reflection, Verma.
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That’s beautifully said. Sometimes our true USP isn’t something loud or obvious—it’s the quiet tenderness others notice in us before we notice it ourselves. Thank you for sharing that, and for the kind words. I appreciate them more than you know.
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My pleasure, Verma
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Thank you so much.
How is your day ?
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very nice.
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Thank you so much.
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This is a really tough question. How we want to be seen and the reality of how others see us are not necessarily the same, and post people aren’t ready, emotionally, to listen. As I sit here pondering your question, im not sure … ive been described as kind … one person said the kindest person they know. I guess that’s good, but I think id prefer to be ethical, I have strong ethical values (been told I make things difficult for myself), I’ll stand my ground and argue against injustice
.. if kindness fits with fairness and equity, that’s how I see my usb
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What a beautifully honest and thoughtful reflection. You’re absolutely right — the gap between how we wish to be seen and how others actually perceive us can be wide, and not everyone is emotionally prepared to receive the truth of who we are.
But the clarity you’ve expressed here says a great deal about your inner compass.
Being called “kind” is meaningful, of course — but the fact that you value ethics, fairness, and standing your ground against injustice reveals something deeper: your kindness isn’t softness, it’s integrity. It’s kindness with a spine.
That is far rarer, and far harder to maintain.
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Wow. This post really resonates right now, as I work to be all things to all people, because so many others can’t or simply won’t act. For those unable to act, I am a lifeline. For those unwilling to act, I am a conundrum. They ask “Why don’t you just say NO?” The simple answer is I just want to do the right thing to the best of my ability in each situation. I don’t want public recognition, I don’t want compensation. A simple thank you or acknowledgement of what I have done for them is enough. Even that simple recognition is beyond some people’s ability and I am OK with that. It is enough that I just did my best. Have a great day. Allan
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Allan, your words reflect a rare kind of integrity — the quiet strength of someone who chooses to do what’s right simply because it is right, not because anyone is watching. That kind of character often goes unrecognized, and yet it holds entire situations, teams, and even people together more than they’ll ever realize.
Being a lifeline is heavy work. It stretches the heart in ways others may never see, and yes, sometimes it feels unfair when effort is met with silence instead of gratitude. But the fact that you continue anyway — not for applause, not for reward, but because it aligns with who you are — speaks volumes
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Monotheism not only violates the 2nd Sinai commandment,
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Thank you.
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“I can sit with someone’s mess without rushing to tidy it”–I aspire to that.
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Yes, That’s such a beautiful and profound aspiration.
Being able to sit with someone’s mess—without fixing, judging, or hurrying them—is one of the deepest expressions of compassion.
It shows presence, patience, and genuine love. The world needs more of that kind of gentle strength.
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Go Green Home Number 1 Thanks Good Morning
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Thank you so much for your visit .
Your words mean a lot.
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Profound counsel, Viya, clearly but elegantly presented. It’s such a helpful, meaningful gift to others. 💜
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That’s really kind of you to say — thank you. 💜
If the words offered even a bit of clarity or comfort to someone, then they’ve done their job.
I’m grateful you felt their intention.
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💜🪶
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Thank you so much.
Stay connected and keep sharing.❤️
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