Propane and Fuel Delivery Account Selling — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Auto-Delivery Account Switch is a 60-minute training for propane and heating-fuel reps who win recurring delivery accounts — residential homes, commercial buildings, agriculture, and autogas fleets — away from incumbent suppliers. The session teaches a four-part ritual: survey the customer's tank and usage to size the account, sell reliability and automatic delivery instead of price-per-gallon, structure a switching offer with a clean tank-set, and close on a multi-year auto-delivery agreement with budget billing.
Built on the NPGA (National Propane Gas Association) account-development discipline, PERC (Propane Education and Research Council) reliability and safety messaging, and NFPA 58 tank-set code, this training shows a rep how to convert a price-shopping prospect into a contracted, never-runs-out account.
Section 1 — Why Price-Per-Gallon Selling Loses the Account (5 min)
Open with the customer's real fear on the whiteboard. A homeowner or facility manager does not lie awake comparing cents per gallon — they lie awake worried about running out of fuel on the coldest night of the year. The rep who leads with price gets switched away the moment a competitor undercuts by two cents.
The rep who leads with never running out owns the account for a decade.
Set the frame out loud:
- The price seller: Wins on per-gallon rate, gets switched the next season when someone undercuts, churns constantly, never builds a base.
- The reliability seller: Wins on automatic delivery, tank monitoring, and emergency response — the customer never thinks about fuel again and never shops you.
- The number that matters: A propane account on automatic delivery with budget billing churns far less than a will-call price-shopper, and the lifetime value of a held residential account over a typical 7-to-10-year relationship dwarfs any one-season per-gallon discount.
Read the PERC reliability principle aloud: *"You are not selling gallons. You are selling the certainty that the tank is never empty when the customer needs it."* The cold-night runout is the customer's nightmare. Sell the cure for it.
Section 2 — The Tank and Usage Survey (15 min)
The account is built from a survey of the customer's tank and burn rate, not a phone quote on rate. The rep sizes the tank, estimates annual usage, identifies who owns the current tank, and fills out a verbatim account brief. No survey, no real offer. Have reps fill this out for a live prospect now.
Verbatim Account Survey Brief (rep fills out at the site):
- Account: [Name] — [Residential / commercial / ag / fleet] — [Address] — [Single tank or multi-site count]
- Tank status: [Size in gallons, owned by customer or leased from incumbent, above or underground, age and condition]
- Annual usage and appliances: [Estimated gallons/year, heating + water heater + cooking + generator + autogas]
- Current pain with incumbent: [Runouts, late deliveries, surprise price spikes, poor service response]
- Delivery method today: [Will-call vs automatic; if will-call, that is the switch opportunity]
- Who signs and switch barriers: [Decision-maker; tank ownership and any incumbent contract or removal cost]
Coach the "find the runout story" rule from NPGA account-development practice. Every will-call customer has a runout story — the time they were cold for two days waiting on a delivery. Surface it. That story, not your rate, is what closes the switch.
Show the bad example: *"What are you paying per gallon now? I'll beat it."* That starts a price war you'll lose next season and trains the customer to shop you forever.
Section 3 — Surveying the Site Without Starting a Price War (10 min)
The survey is where reps default to rate-talk and lose the reliability story. Drill the discipline.
- Lead with the tank, not the rate. Ask *"When did you last run low or out?"* before any number comes up. The runout story is your opening.
- Check tank ownership first. If the incumbent leases the tank, the switch requires a tank swap and set — that's a cost and a logistics step you plan for, not a surprise on close day.
- Size usage honestly. Add up heating, water heat, cooking, generator, and any autogas. An accurate gallons-per-year number drives tank sizing and budget billing.
- Document the incumbent's failures. Late deliveries, runouts, surprise price spikes, no-answer emergency lines — these are your switch justifications, in the customer's own words.
- Identify switch barriers early. Existing contract, tank-removal fee, underground-tank complications — name them so the close isn't derailed.
What to NEVER say on the survey (read aloud, slowly):
- "I'll beat their price per gallon." (starts a price war you lose next season; trains the customer to shop you)
- "Auto-delivery is just an upsell." (it's the core value — never apologize for it)
- "Switching is a huge hassle." (you just talked the customer out of the switch)
- "We're the cheapest propane in the county." (cheapest churns; reliability holds)
- "Your current company is a rip-off." (trashing the incumbent makes the customer defensive)
- Anything promising a fixed per-gallon price for years — propane is a commodity that moves; sell budget billing that smooths the swing, not a frozen rate you can't honor.
The NPGA field discipline is blunt: on the survey you are a reliability and supply advisor, not a rate quoter. The account switches when the customer pictures never being cold and waiting again.
Section 4 — The Switch Offer and Close (10 min)
Run the close with the decision-maker and the tank logistics resolved. Use the verbatim script.
Verbatim Switch Close Script (rep opens with these exact words):
Rep: "You told me you ran out last February and waited two days in the cold. That doesn't happen on our automatic delivery. We monitor your usage, schedule the truck before you ever get low, and you get a real person on the emergency line 24/7."
[Lay the account survey and the delivery calendar on the table. Stay silent. Let the runout memory sit.]
Customer: [reacts to the reliability story]
Rep: "Here's how the switch works: we set our own tank at no install charge with the switching offer, put you on automatic delivery, and budget billing spreads your cost evenly across twelve months so there's no winter spike. We handle the tank swap — you do nothing."
[Slide the auto-delivery agreement across. Point to the tank-set offer and budget billing, not a per-gallon rate.]
Rep: "We can set the tank and have you on automatic delivery before the next cold snap. Should we schedule the tank set for this week or next?"
[Close on the tank-set date, not on price. Stop talking.]
Do NOT:
- Close on a per-gallon number — close on automatic delivery, the tank set, and budget billing. Rate is the thing that gets you switched away.
- Surprise the customer with a tank-removal cost — surface incumbent switch barriers during the survey.
- Leave without a scheduled tank-set date — "let me think about it" with no date is a stall, and the cold snap won't wait.
Section 5 — The Account Lifetime-Value Math (15 min)
The biggest fuel money is in held auto-delivery accounts and commercial/ag/fleet volume — not in one-time will-call drops. Build it on the whiteboard.
The math (for a residential auto-delivery account):
- Average home: ~800 gallons/year for heat, water, and cooking
- Held on automatic delivery for a 7-year relationship = ~5,600 gallons of recurring volume from one switch
- A will-call price-shopper churns to a competitor within 1-2 seasons — that same 800 gallons walks away and you re-acquire at full cost.
- Commercial and ag accounts run 3,000-15,000+ gallons/year, so a single switched commercial account can be worth more than ten residential will-call customers combined.
NPGA retention data is the close: an automatic-delivery, budget-billed account is sticky; a will-call price-shopper is rented, not owned. Sell the account you keep, not the gallon you discount.
Common customer objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"My current company is two cents cheaper per gallon."* — Two cents on 800 gallons is sixteen dollars a year. One runout cost you two days in the cold and an emergency fee. Automatic delivery is worth more than sixteen dollars.
- *"Switching sounds like a hassle with the tank."* — We handle the entire tank swap and set. You do nothing but enjoy never running out. The hassle is ours, not yours.
- *"What if propane prices spike in winter?"* — That's exactly why we put you on budget billing — your cost is spread evenly across twelve months, so the winter swing never hits you in one bill.
Have each rep map a real switch target in their territory before they leave the room — name the prospect and whether they're will-call.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each rep leaves with three written commitments, taped to their truck dashboard:
- One tank-and-usage survey is booked with a named will-call prospect this week.
- Every offer I make leads with automatic delivery and the runout story — never with a per-gallon rate.
- One commercial or ag volume target is identified, with the decision-maker named and annual gallons estimated.
Close by reading the NPGA account principle aloud one more time: *"The cheapest gallon gets switched every season. The reliable account gets refilled for a decade."*
Then pin the survey brief template and the lifetime-value math sheet in the team's shared drive before the room clears.
FAQ
Q1: How do I switch a customer whose tank is leased by the incumbent? A: Plan a tank swap and set — pull their leased tank (or have the incumbent retrieve it) and set yours under your switching offer. Surface any removal fee during the survey so it isn't a surprise. Many reps waive the install charge as the switching incentive.
Q2: What is budget billing and why does it close deals? A: Budget billing spreads the customer's estimated annual fuel cost evenly across twelve monthly payments, so the winter usage spike never lands in one painful bill. It removes price anxiety, which is the real objection hiding behind "your competitor is cheaper."
Q3: Should I lead with residential or commercial accounts? A: Both, but the volume is in commercial, ag, and fleet — a single account at 5,000-15,000 gallons/year outweighs many residential homes. Residential auto-delivery accounts are sticky and refer well; commercial accounts move the gallons. Build a mix.
Q4: How do I justify automatic delivery to a customer who likes controlling their orders? A: Frame it as tank monitoring and scheduled delivery — they're not losing control, they're gaining a supplier who watches the tank so they never have to. The will-call customer who "controls it" is the one who runs out in February.
Q5: What tank-set code or safety standard should I reference? A: Tank placement and installation follow NFPA 58 (Liquefied Petroleum Gas Code) and state requirements. Citing the standard reassures the customer the set is done to code and positions you as the professional, not the cheap operator.
Q6: How is this different from a one-time will-call fuel sale? A: A will-call sale moves gallons today and the customer shops you again next time. Account selling wins a contracted, automatic-delivery relationship with budget billing and a tank you set — recurring volume you hold for years, not a one-off drop.
Different motion, different lifetime value.
Sources
- National Propane Gas Association (NPGA), *Account Development and Member Resources*, npga.org, 2024-2025.
- Propane Education and Research Council (PERC), *Reliability, Safety, and Consumer Messaging Programs*, propane.com, 2024.
- National Fire Protection Association, *NFPA 58 — Liquefied Petroleum Gas Code*, nfpa.org, 2024 edition.
- U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), *Heating Fuel and Propane Market Data*, eia.gov, 2024-2025.
- National Propane Gas Association, *Propane Marketplace and Delivery Management Resources*, npgapropanemarketplace.com, 2024.
- LP Gas Magazine, *Retail Propane Operations and Customer Retention Coverage*, lpgasmagazine.com, 2024.
- Propane Gas Association of New England (PGANE), *Regional Retailer Best Practices*, pgane.org, 2024.
- Mike Weinberg, *New Sales. Simplified.*, AMACOM, 2013.