Two neighbors sit nearly level at the top of Crowdfire's similarity graph — John Legere at 0.91 and YouTube Creators at 0.91 — and they represent genuinely different audience neighborhoods: a Professionals subcategory figure on one side, a Technology subcategory platform on the other. That two-peak structure is the defining feature of this graph.
The shape is two-peak, meaning the audience doesn't consolidate around a single pole. Below those two leaders, the next tier — KalaniBallFree (0.90, Athletes), YouTube (0.90, Entertainment Platforms), and Comcast Business (0.89, Telecommunications) — pulls in a third direction: consumer telecommunications and platform brands. Tallying the subcategories across all 10 neighbors reveals a notably cross-kind pattern. Crowdfire's own subcategory is Tools and Resources; only one neighbor, Twitter Live (0.85), shares that classification. The remaining nine span Professionals, Technology, Athletes, Entertainment Platforms, Telecommunications (twice, with ZTE USA at 0.87 and Samsung Mobile US at 0.87), Grocery and Superstores (CVS Pharmacy, 0.87), Department Stores (Macy's, 0.85), and Musicians and Bands (Flo Rida, 0.85). No other Tools and Resources entity appears in the top 10 beyond Twitter Live.
The audience Crowdfire draws looks far less like the audience of comparable tools than it does like the audiences of mobile carriers, consumer platforms, and mainstream celebrity accounts — a cross-kind spread that suggests a broad, digitally active consumer base rather than a specialist professional one.