How to run a car club drive
A good club run looks effortless: everyone meets on time, the convoy stays together, the coffee stop runs to plan and nobody gets lost. Pulling that off is the hard part. Here are the three common ways clubs organise a run — and how they stack up.
What a club run actually needs
- A route drivers can preview and follow.
- A meeting point — a café, venue or car park everyone can find.
- Roles — a lead car to set the pace and a tail-end charlie at the back.
- A way to stay together when the convoy strings out at lights and turns.
- Pit stops for coffee, fuel and photos — and a way to know everyone arrived.
- RSVPs so you know who is coming.
The three common approaches
1. Group chat + spreadsheet
The default for most clubs. A messaging group for comms, a shared spreadsheet for RSVPs, and a map link for the route. It’s free and everyone already has it — but it’s all manual, there’s no live tracking, and on a big run the convoy splits up the moment you hit traffic.
2. Location-sharing apps
General GPS / location-sharing apps let everyone share their position. That solves “where is everyone” but doesn’t understand a convoy — there’s no lead/tail role, no route, no pit-stop check-ins, and reading a screen full of dots while driving isn’t ideal.
3. A purpose-built convoy app
A dedicated app (like ilgiro) ties it together: build and publish a route, set a meeting point, assign the leader and tail, track the convoy live, and check drivers in automatically at each pit stop. More structure to set up than a chat, but far less to manage on the day.
Side-by-side comparison
| Need | Chat + spreadsheet | Location-sharing app | Convoy app (ilgiro) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plan & share the route | Map link in chat; easy to lose | Sometimes | Built-in route builder + GPX |
| Set a meeting point | Typed in chat | No | Named venue on every event |
| Live convoy tracking | No | Yes (everyone shares location) | Yes — follow the leader live |
| Lead car & tail-end charlie | Verbal only | No roles | Assigned roles on the map |
| Pit-stop check-ins | Head-count by hand | No | Automatic (geofenced) |
| RSVPs / who is coming | Chat thumbs-up | No | RSVP list per event |
| “I’m lost” help | Phone calls | Pin drop | One-tap on the live map |
| Setup effort | Low, but manual every run | Low | Low — reusable events |
| Cost | Free | Free | Club subscription |
Which should your club use?
For a small, regular Sunday run with people who know the area, a group chat is perfectly fine. The moment your runs get bigger — longer convoys, new members, multiple pit stops, or a multi-day event — the manual approach starts to cost you time and stragglers. That’s where a convoy app earns its keep.
FAQ
What is the best way to keep a convoy together on a club drive?
Assign a lead car to set the pace and a tail-end charlie at the back, and use live location tracking so every driver can see where the leader is. Purpose-built convoy apps show the leader and tail on a shared map so nobody guesses which turn to take.
How do car clubs track who actually turned up to a run?
The simplest method is a manual head-count at the start and each stop. Geofenced check-ins automate this — a driver is checked in automatically when they arrive within range of the meeting point or a pit stop.
Do I need an app to organise a car club run?
No — many clubs run successfully with a group chat, a shared spreadsheet and a map link. An app helps most on bigger runs where keeping a long convoy together, managing pit stops and knowing who came are hard to do by hand.
What should a good club-run route include?
A clear meeting point (a café, venue or car park), a sensible pace, scheduled pit stops (coffee, fuel, photo) roughly every 45–90 minutes, and a defined finish. Sharing it as a GPX file lets drivers load it into their own navigation.
Run your next drive with ilgiro
Plan the route, keep the convoy together, check everyone in automatically.
See it in action →