The top 10 neighbors for uBreakiFix — an Electronics retailer — contain no other Electronics entity; the nearest audiences are shaped almost entirely by apparel, furniture, and personal services.
The shape is broad: scores run from Lovesac at 0.93 down to Music at 0.86, with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Barnes and Noble (0.89) and The Men's Wearhouse (0.88) follow closely, then DSW (Designer Shoe Warehouse) (0.88) and Tim Howard (0.88). By subcategory, the top 10 breaks down as: Furniture Stores (Lovesac), Bookstores (Barnes and Noble), Mens Apparel (The Men's Wearhouse), Footwear (DSW), Athletes (Tim Howard), Pet Care and Services (Pet Care & Services), Fast Casual Dining (Einstein Brothers), Mens Apparel again (Men's Apparel), Beauty Salons and Spas (Amazing Lash Studio), and Music (Music). That is a genuinely mixed set — apparel (two entries), services, dining, retail, and a celebrity athlete — with no subcategory dominating. The cross-kind finding is the story: uBreakiFix's audience shape looks nothing like other electronics retailers in the top 10; it mirrors the audiences of mid-market brick-and-mortar brands across several unrelated categories.
That pattern suggests an audience defined less by technology interest than by a broader suburban retail footprint — the same people who walk into a furniture showroom or a men's suit store are the ones whose attention profile most closely matches this repair chain.