All ten of Gucci (social)'s nearest neighbors by audience shape are Fashion brands — a same-kind cluster with no cross-category entries in the top 10.
The shape is flat: scores run from Dior (social) at 0.97 down to Valentino at 0.92, a span of only five points across the full set. Lacoste (social) sits at 0.95, Dolce & Gabbana at 0.95, Burberry (social) at 0.94, and Armani and Versace both at 0.94 — a dense band of luxury and premium fashion houses with nearly indistinguishable audience compositions. Fendi (0.94), PRADA (0.93), and Louis Vuitton (0.93) round out the set. Similarity here measures audience shape, not thematic overlap — yet the top 10 are entirely Fashion subcategory, meaning the audience that follows Gucci on social is structurally reproduced, almost exactly, across the full tier of European luxury and premium fashion brands.
No other subcategory — not footwear, not beauty, not media — appears within these ten positions. The wider graph (positions 11–50) does show non-Fashion neighbors, but the innermost cluster is a single-kind formation.
This audience shape signals a tightly defined consumer segment: one whose attention is distributed evenly across the luxury fashion tier rather than anchored to any single house.