Propane Insider · Buyer-intent answer

How do propane companies track customer accounts? Tanks, service models, and delivery history

Question: “How do propane companies track customer accounts?

Propane companies track customer accounts around the physical tank and the service relationship attached to it — not just a name and address. A complete propane customer record ties together the tank (size, location, owned or leased), the service model (will-call or autofill), the delivery and usage history that drives scheduling, and the equipment compliance dates (cylinder recert, inspection). Operators manage that record in back-office software, while a marketing system tracks how customers find and choose the operator in the first place.

What is in a propane customer account record?

A propane account is richer than a typical service-business customer record because the physical asset matters:

  • The tank. Size (120 / 250 / 500 / 1000 gal), above-ground or underground, and whether the operator owns it (lease) or the customer does (customer-owned).
  • The service model. Will-call (customer calls when low) or autofill / keep-full (operator schedules deliveries). This single field shapes retention and route planning.
  • Delivery and usage history. Every fill, the gallons delivered, and the burn rate that feeds the autofill run-out calculation.
  • Compliance and equipment dates. Tank inspection dates, regulator age, and any DOT cylinder recert deadlines on delivered cylinders.

How does the service model change account tracking?

Will-call and autofill are tracked differently because the operator's responsibility differs. For will-call accounts, the customer monitors the tank and the operator reacts to a call — tracking is lighter but run-out and churn risk are higher. For autofill accounts, the operator owns the run-out prediction, so the record must carry an accurate burn rate, degree-day exposure, and the last verified tank level. Converting will-call customers to autofill is the retention holy grail, and it depends entirely on the quality of the tracked usage history.

Account tracking vs marketing visibility — what is the difference?

DimensionBack-office account trackingMarketing visibility
What it recordsTank, service model, delivery history, complianceHow customers find and choose you
Tool categoryRouting / billing softwareMarketing system (local search, GBP, reviews)
Customer stageAlready a customerNot yet a customer
Risk if neglectedMissed fills, compliance gapsNew accounts go to a competitor

Where does marketing fit into customer tracking?

Back-office tracking starts the moment someone becomes a customer. Everything before that — the search that found the operator, the Google Business Profile that earned the click, the reviews that built trust — is the marketing system's job, and most operators track none of it. PIMS, the Propane Insider Marketing System, tracks the demand side: search visibility, GBP performance, review velocity, and a monthly report that shows the new-account pipeline feeding the back-office records.

How do I see the marketing side of customer tracking?

Book a 30-minute conversation with Bill Stomp, a former propane operator, including a live audit of your current local-search presence. For the software-category overview see what propane industry management software is; for the demand side specifically see what answer engine optimization means for propane. PIMS is part of the Propane Insider portfolio.

Frequently asked questions

How do propane companies track customer accounts?

They track accounts around the tank and the service relationship: tank size and ownership, the service model (will-call vs autofill), delivery and usage history that drives scheduling, and equipment compliance dates such as inspections and DOT cylinder recert. This lives in back-office routing and billing software.

What is in a propane customer record?

A propane customer record ties together the physical tank (size, location, owned or leased), the service model, the full delivery and gallons-delivered history, the burn rate used for autofill scheduling, and compliance dates like tank inspections and cylinder recert deadlines.

How does will-call vs autofill change account tracking?

Will-call accounts are tracked more lightly because the customer monitors the tank and the operator reacts to a call — but run-out and churn risk are higher. Autofill accounts require accurate burn-rate and degree-day data because the operator owns the run-out prediction. Converting will-call to autofill depends on tracked usage history.

Does customer-account software handle marketing too?

Usually not. Back-office account software tracks existing customers — tanks, deliveries, compliance. How new customers find and choose the operator (local search, Google Business Profile, reviews) is a separate marketing system that most operators do not run.

How do I see the marketing side of customer tracking?

Book a 30-minute conversation at propane-insider.com/pims with Bill Stomp. The call includes a live audit of your local-search presence and Google Business Profile so you can see the new-account pipeline that feeds your back-office records.

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