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Canva

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Canva's top 10 nearest neighbors span authors, athletes, podcasts, fitness brands, government accounts, and a research organization — no single subcategory dominates, and no other Technology brand appears among them.

The shape is flat: scores run from Brené Brown at 0.84 down to Education Next at 0.81, a band of just 0.03 across ten neighbors. The subcategory mix is genuinely eclectic. Authors account for three of the ten — Brené Brown (0.84), Simon Sinek (0.81), and Seth Godin (0.79) — making them the largest single cluster, but still a minority. Athletes appear twice: Tim Howard (0.82) and Taylor Twellman (0.82), both soccer figures. The remaining five positions are held by a podcast (Men in Blazers, 0.84), a fitness brand (Orangetheory Fitness, 0.83), a government account (White House Press Secretary, 0.82), a news publisher (U.S. News Education, 0.81), and a research organization (NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover, 0.81). The cross-kind pattern here is notable: Canva's nearest audiences are shaped primarily by self-improvement authors, soccer athletes, and civic/educational media — not by other design or technology products.

That breadth, compressed into a narrow similarity band, suggests an audience whose composition is defined less by any single interest vertical than by a consistent underlying profile that cuts across professional development, civic engagement, and active lifestyle content.

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