The top 10 neighbors for NonProfit Times span news publishers, journalists, politicians, and activism organizations — a mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed tightly between 0.98 and 0.95.
The shape is flat. Nonprofit Quarterly leads at 0.98, the only neighbor that shares a direct sector focus on the nonprofit world. After that, the cluster shifts quickly into political media and journalism: Yamiche Alcindor (0.96) and PBS NewsHour (0.96) are followed by HuffPost Politics (0.96) and Talking Points Memo (0.95). Politicians appear as well — Tom Perez (0.95), Hillary Clinton (0.95) — alongside the activism organization Media Matters (0.95). NPR Politics (0.95) and Mother Jones (0.95) round out the ten. Tallying subcategories across the top 10: four are News Publishers, three are Journalists, two are Politicians, and one is Activism — no other Blogs appear in the top 10.
The cross-kind character of this cluster is the defining feature. NonProfit Times is itself a Blog, yet its nearest audiences are shaped almost entirely by political news publishers, individual journalists, and politicians rather than by other sector-specific publications. The Chronicle of Philanthropy appears just outside the top 10 in the wider graph, but within these ten, the nonprofit-sector framing is largely absent — the audience composition looks far more like that of a politically engaged news reader than a sector trade publication reader.
This pattern suggests the audience NonProfit Times draws overlaps heavily with a civically oriented, politically attentive readership rather than a narrowly professional one.