The top 10 neighbors for Curalate span a narrow similarity band — 0.96 to 0.95 — with no single dominant pull and no sharp drop-off between positions. That flat distribution is itself the finding.
The cluster is built primarily from Marketing Channels, with magazines and websites making up the bulk of the set. Fast Company leads at 0.96, followed closely by Ad Age (0.95) and Mashable (0.95) — all three classified as magazines. Inc. (0.95) rounds out that subcategory. Websites appear as well: The Points Guy at 0.95. The remaining neighbors introduce more variety: Weijia Jiang (0.95) is a journalist, Tom Colicchio (0.95) a TV personality, Freakonomics (0.95) a podcast, and Kevin Rose (0.95) a tech personality. One outlier in kind is Click.Click.Click (0.96), classified under Humor Memes and Satire — the only Miscellaneous entry in the top 10.
Curalate is itself a B2B brand, and only one other B2B brand appears anywhere in the broader results — Nielsen at 0.94, just outside the top 10. The top 10 are dominated by media properties and individual personalities rather than fellow B2B entities, suggesting the audience's shape is defined more by a media-literate, professionally curious consumption pattern than by industry category alignment.
The flat distribution across a diverse mix of magazines, websites, journalists, and personalities points to an audience with broad, consistent engagement across professional media rather than a concentrated niche.