Le Creuset's nearest audiences are almost entirely apparel shoppers — seven of the top 10 neighbors by audience similarity (a 0–1 measure of how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition) carry an Apparel category label, and not one shares Le Creuset's own Home Goods and Furnishings subcategory.
The shape is broad: scores compress from Janie and Jack at 0.89 down to The Woodhouse Day Spa at 0.83, with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Within that apparel cluster, the mix spans women's labels — Ann Taylor (0.86), Chico's (0.83) — outdoor and athletic brands — Columbia Sportswear (0.85), The North Face (0.84) — and general apparel like Ralph Lauren (0.83). The three non-apparel neighbors — P.F. Chang's China Bistro (0.84) in Casual Dining, Roosters (0.83) in Hair Salons and Barber Shops, and PGA TOUR Superstore (0.83) in Sporting Goods — reinforce the breadth rather than pointing to a second coherent cluster. The absence of any fellow Home Goods and Furnishings brand in the top 10 is the defining structural fact: this audience's shape is defined by what it wears and where it eats, not by what it buys for the kitchen.
The broad, cross-category spread suggests an audience whose composition is recognizable across a wide range of lifestyle retail, with no single adjacent category owning the overlap.