The World Economic Forum's top 10 neighbors form a tight, mixed cluster — no single entity dominates, and the scores span only 0.98 to 0.97, a band narrow enough that the composition of the mix is the real finding.
Six of the ten neighbors are News Publishers: The Economist (0.98), Financial Times Best Of (0.98), Bloomberg Quicktake (0.98), Bloomberg (0.98), Bloomberg Businessweek (0.98), and Financial Times Breaking News (0.98). That concentration of financial and global-affairs publishers defines the cluster's core. The remaining four neighbors cross into different subcategories: Jack Dorsey (0.98) and Evan Williams (0.98) are Tech Personalities; TechCrunch (0.98) is a Website; and World Bank (0.98) is the only Non-Profit and the only fellow Organization in the top 10. No other Research Organization — the WEF's own subcategory — appears among the ten nearest neighbors.
The shape is flat: scores compress into a 0.004-point range with no standout pull, meaning the audience overlaps broadly and evenly across elite financial news, global institutional content, and tech-industry voices rather than clustering tightly around any single peer.
This pattern points to an audience that moves fluidly across financial journalism, institutional policy content, and tech leadership — a cross-kind profile with no single dominant neighbor.