Domo's top 10 nearest neighbors span TV personalities, financial media, B2B research firms, and business authors — a mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed tightly between 0.93 and 0.91.
The shape is flat: Jim Cramer leads at 0.93, followed by CNBC's Fast Money at 0.92, but neither pulls far enough ahead to anchor the cluster on its own. The top 10 break down as four TV Shows (CNBC's Fast Money, CNBC's Closing Bell, Squawk on the Street, Squawk Box), two B2B brands (Forrester at 0.92, Gartner at 0.91), one TV Personality (Jim Cramer), one News Publisher (WSJ Personal Finance at 0.92), one Tech Personality (Guy Kawasaki at 0.92), and one Website (The Motley Fool at 0.91). That's a striking cross-kind result: Domo is a B2B brand, yet only two of its ten nearest neighbors share that subcategory. The rest are financial TV programming and market-facing media — a pattern suggesting the audience that follows Domo also tracks business news and market commentary closely, not primarily other enterprise software.
The flat, cross-kind shape points to an audience that sits at the intersection of professional business practice and active financial media consumption.