The top 10 neighbors form a tight cluster of tech and business media — no single entity pulls far ahead of the rest, and the scores compress into a narrow band from 0.93 down to 0.89.
ZDNet leads at 0.93, the highest score in the set, followed closely by CNET News at 0.92. Both are Websites or News Publishers covering technology, which matches TechRepublic's own subcategory as a Website. That same-kind pattern holds for Computerworld at 0.89 and GrowthHackers at 0.90 — both Websites. But the cluster isn't purely self-referential: Google Analytics (0.90) and Marketo (0.90) are Technology and B2B brands respectively, not publishing properties at all. Microsoft in Business (0.89, Technology) and Glassdoor (0.89, Other) extend the mix further into enterprise software and workplace tools. Guy Kawasaki (0.89) is the lone individual in the top 10, classified as a Tech Personality under Celebrities and Influencers. Social Media Today (0.89, Website) rounds out the set.
Tallying subcategories across the 10: four are Websites, two are Technology brands, one is a B2B brand, one is Other, one is a News Publisher, and one is a Tech Personality. The dominant pattern is tech-and-business media properties alongside enterprise software brands — a professional, digitally-oriented audience that moves fluidly between editorial and tool-based content.
The flat shape here reflects an audience with no single gravitational center: it is drawn equally to tech journalism, B2B software, and professional content, with no one neighbor standing clearly apart from the rest.