Citi's nearest audiences span an unusually wide range of entity types — magazines, news publishers, fashion brands, non-profits, and finance peers — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. The top score, CNN International at 0.93, leads by only a few hundredths over Vogue Magazine at 0.91 and Deutsche Bank at 0.91, a spread that defines the flat shape of this graph.
Tallying the subcategories across the top 10 reveals a mix with no dominant kind: Magazines account for three neighbors — Vogue Magazine (0.91), InStyle (0.91), and The Hollywood Reporter (0.90) — while News Publishers contribute CNN International (0.93). Finance peers appear twice: Deutsche Bank (0.91) and Citibank (social) (0.88), the latter being Citi's own social handle. Fashion enters through DKNY (0.91), and Celebrities and Influencers through Nina Garcia (0.91), a TV Personality subcategory. TheWrap (0.89) and UNICEF (0.89) round out the set as a Website and a Non-Profit respectively. The cross-kind composition here is the finding: only two of the ten neighbors share Citi's Finance subcategory, while the majority are editorial and media properties — magazines, news publishers, and entertainment-adjacent websites.
This pattern suggests Citi's audience is shaped less by financial peer overlap than by a cosmopolitan, media-engaged profile that cuts across fashion publishing, global news, and institutional organizations simultaneously.