Enmarket's top 10 neighbors span five distinct subcategories — banks, casual dining, discount stores, gas stations, and convenience stores — with no single type dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.82 down to 0.77.
The shape is flat: Arvest Bank leads at 0.82, followed closely by Trust Mark at 0.81, but neither pulls away from the pack. The most structurally notable feature is how much of the neighbor set falls outside Enmarket's own Gas Stations subcategory. Only Sprint Mart (0.78) shares that exact subcategory in the top 10; two others — Dodge's Southern Style (0.77) and MotoMart (0.77) — are Convenience Stores rather than Gas Stations. The remaining five positions belong to banks (Arvest Bank, Trust Mark), a discount retailer (Roses Express at 0.80), and casual dining chains (Jack's Family Restaurants at 0.79, Shoney's at 0.77, Krystal at 0.77). That mix — regional banks, value retail, and Southern casual dining sitting alongside fuel and convenience brands — defines the cluster's character. The audience shape Enmarket shares is less about fuel specifically and more about a regional, everyday-errand consumer profile that cuts across multiple brick-and-mortar categories.
The flat distribution and cross-category spread suggest an audience whose composition is broadly shared with the fabric of regional commerce in the American South and Midwest, rather than being tightly bound to any single retail vertical.