Roberto Cavalli's top 10 nearest neighbors are entirely Fashion brands — all ten share the center entity's own subcategory, making this one of the more same-kind similarity clusters in the data.
The shape is broad: scores run from Valentino at 0.96 down to Cartier at 0.91, with no single neighbor pulling dramatically ahead of the rest. Saint Laurent (0.95), Christian Louboutin (0.95), and Bulgari (0.95) cluster tightly just behind Valentino, followed by Jimmy Choo (0.94) and Givenchy (0.94). Further down, Dior (0.92), PRADA (0.92), and Alexander McQueen (0.91) round out the set. The spread across all ten is only about five points — a narrow band that confirms the broad shape classification.
What the composition reveals is that Roberto Cavalli's audience overlaps most with the luxury end of the Fashion subcategory: heritage couture houses, high-end footwear, and fine jewelry brands all classified under Fashion. There is no crossover into magazines, retail, or other categories within the top 10 — the neighbor set is unusually pure in kind.
This tight clustering around luxury Fashion peers suggests an audience whose attention is concentrated within a single, well-defined market segment rather than distributed across adjacent lifestyle or media categories.