Sony Music's ten nearest neighbors are almost entirely other music-brand entities — a tightly packed cluster of record labels and music companies with similarity scores ranging from 0.98 down to 0.95, a span of less than four points across the full set.
The shape is flat: Interscope Records leads at 0.98, followed closely by Warner Music Group (0.98), Universal Music Group (0.97), RCA Records (0.97), and Capitol Records (0.97). No single neighbor pulls away from the pack. Eight of the ten are classified under the Music subcategory: alongside those five, Atlantic Records (0.97), Columbia Records (0.96), Epic Records (0.96), and Roc Nation (0.95) round out the core. The two exceptions — RCA Records, filed under TV Shows, and Island Records, filed under Websites — are both record labels whose taxonomy classification diverges from their functional identity, yet their audience shapes land squarely inside this same cluster.
The overall picture is one of near-total same-kind overlap: Sony Music's audience composition mirrors the music-label space so consistently that no cross-category neighbor breaks into the top 10, and the scores compress into a narrow band rather than tapering toward any outlier.