The top 10 neighbors for World Bank span five distinct subcategories — no single type dominates, and the scores compress into a narrow band from 0.98 down to 0.96.
The shape is flat: World Economic Forum leads at 0.98, followed closely by UN Women at 0.97 and Foreign Affairs at 0.97, but none of these pulls far enough ahead to anchor the cluster on its own. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: News Publishers account for two entries (Bloomberg Quicktake at 0.97 and Foreign Policy at 0.97), Websites one (The Verge at 0.97), Tech Personalities two (Alexis Ohanian Sr. at 0.97 and Jack Dorsey at 0.96), Education one (Harvard University at 0.97), Research Organizations one (World Economic Forum), Non-Profit one (UN Women), and Magazines one (Foreign Affairs). The mix is genuinely heterogeneous: global-affairs media, international organizations, and tech-world figures sit at essentially the same distance.
The cross-kind pattern is the defining feature here. World Bank is classified as a Non-Profit, yet only one other Non-Profit — UN Women — appears in the top 10, alongside a Research Organization, an Education institution, multiple news and magazine outlets, and two Tech Personalities. The audience this entity draws does not look primarily like a non-profit audience; it looks like an audience that moves fluidly across international policy media, elite institutions, and technology discourse.
This flat, mixed-subcategory cluster suggests an audience defined less by any single content category than by a broad orientation toward global affairs and institutional credibility.