
Five years, the only lesson that counts: cars don’t just move people—they connect them. Discover why this reshapes how we drive, ride, and relate.
We curate people, not cars. The car is the occasion, the person is the subject. Anyone who inverts that builds auctions instead of communities — and usually doesn't notice until nobody shows up anymore.
If I had to take just one sentence away from seven years of Cars & Coffee, four cities, two Sylt editions and countless Sunday mornings, it would be this: Cars Connect People — not the other way around.
That sounds like a platitude. It is in fact the dividing line between platforms that become communities and platforms that never get beyond first signup.
What most sportscar platforms get wrong
Look at the major sportscar media of the past ten years. They almost all share the same pattern: an imposing inventory of vehicles, exhaustive technical databases, market analyses, price histories, auction results. The car sits at the center of every interaction. The person is a shadow — they show up only as buyer, seller, spec list, account photo.
The logic seems right. Sportscars are expensive, data-relevant, collector-worthy. An exhaustive data foundation looks like the correct answer to a demanding market. What gets lost in that logic: sportscar owners are not buyers, they're not sellers. They are people with stories. Stories that are entangled with the cars but don't consist of them.
A platform that only curates the cars curates the wrong half of the topic.
What we learned on parking lots
Cars & Coffee Düsseldorf told us the same story for seven years: people come because of the cars, they stay because of the other people. Anyone standing on the parking lot at 9 a.m. on a Sunday isn't there to photograph cars — they're there to meet others who share the same early-riser logic. The car is the entry. The conversation is the stay.
That observation was robust across all our cities. Cologne had different cars — but the same behavioral structure. Berlin had fewer cars — but the same behavioral structure. Mönchengladbach was evening instead of morning — but the same behavioral structure. Sylt was four days instead of four hours — but the same behavioral structure. Whoever curates the behavior gets the community for free.
What DRIVTO does with it
DRIVTO is the translation of this observation into platform architecture. We deliberately decided against marketplace logic, against database logic, against auction logic. We decided for a driver-centric platform. Concretely:
First: the DriverDNA methodology. We don't measure first what car someone owns, but how someone drives — via the four archetypes Racer, Connoisseur, Collector, Showstopper. From that emerge recommendations for events, routes, other drivers. The car appears in the profile. But it is not the profile.
Second: the editorial line. Our pillars aren't "911 GT3 RS Review" or "Market Analysis 12C." They are Cars Connect People, State of the Scene, Event Charakter-Check, DriverDNA. All pillars that ask first about the person, then about the car.
Third: event curation. We don't recommend events by "fits your car," but by "fits your driver signature." The difference is subtle — but it determines whether a visit is valuable or wasted time.
The single risk
There is a risk in this strategy, and we know it: a community platform is slower to scale than a marketplace. Marketplaces grow exponentially because they connect two sides (buyers, sellers). Communities grow linearly because they have to be built individually. That's the uncomfortable truth.
What still convinces us to continue: linear growth curves are hard, but they are defensible. A driver community you have curated cleanly is an asset no one can copy. A database of 10,000 sportscar listings is an asset any competitor can build overnight.
We're building the harder asset.
The invitation
If you're reading this and the sentence "Cars Connect People" isn't just a slogan for you but an observation you've made yourself — then you're probably exactly the kind of person we want on the platform. Not because you drive the right car (whichever one), but because you've understood that the car is the occasion and not the goal.
Write to us if you want to become a Driver. Write to us if you're an organizer who wants to talk with DRIVTO. Write to us if you're a brand partner who has understood that the most valuable community is not one you can buy — but one you have to join.

Philipp Lauterbach is the founder of DRIVTO, the curated identity and discovery platform for the European sportscar scene. Based in Düsseldorf, he has been building sportscar communities since August 2018 — first through the Cars+Coffee format in Düsseldorf, Cologne, Berlin, Mönchengladbach, and on Sylt, and since mid-2024 through DRIVTO as a platform with its own editorial magazine and proprietary DriverDNA methodology.
His path into the sportscar world began with an event-management apprenticeship inside a Mercedes-Benz dealer group. From there he moved into marketing roles at Ferrari and Maserati in Düsseldorf, where he became one of the defining marketing voices for these brands in Germany at the time. That phase also gave him his first direct contact with the Cars+Coffee movement — and the affinity for Italian cars that still shapes him today. Ferrari and Pagani have been at the center of what he himself seeks as a driver ever since.
Before DRIVTO, he established the Cars+Coffee stations across several German cities — an independent event series that at its most active phase connected more than 1,500 sportscar drivers across the DACH region. The DRIVTO driver community grew out of that base. His editorial focus sits on the pillars Cars Connect People (personal founder voice, driver stories) and State of the Scene (data-grounded market analyses, industry essays).