The top 10 neighbors for Nonprofit Quarterly span journalists, politicians, news publishers, and non-profits — a mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.95 to 0.98.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The shape is flat: NonProfit Times leads at 0.98, but the drop to the second neighbor, journalist Yamiche Alcindor at 0.97, is small, and the remaining eight neighbors sit within a few hundredths of each other. No single entity pulls away from the pack.
Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: Journalists account for three entries — Yamiche Alcindor (0.97), Elie Mystal (0.96), and Charles M. Blow (0.95). Politicians account for two — Hillary Clinton (0.96) and Bill Clinton (0.95). News Publishers account for two — Mother Jones (0.95) and HuffPost Politics (0.95). The remaining three are PBS NewsHour (TV Shows, 0.96), the Southern Poverty Law Center (Non-Profit, 0.96), and The Chronicle of Philanthropy (Magazines, 0.95). Nonprofit Quarterly's own subcategory — News Publishers — appears twice in the top 10, meaning the audience shape is only partially self-similar; the majority of neighbors are journalists, politicians, and civic organizations rather than fellow news publishers.
The flat distribution across journalists, politicians, and civic media suggests an audience that moves fluidly across progressive news and public-affairs content rather than anchoring tightly to any single content type.