Field ticketing is the backbone of service validation and payment in upstream oil and gas operations—but for many operators, it’s also a source of daily headaches. From paperwork overload to payment delays and coding disputes, the challenges are real and persistent. Recently, we held a webinar focused on tackling these pain points and exploring how digital solutions are transforming field ticketing for the industry. Watch the full replay here to see the discussion in action.
Ready to see how these challenges show up in the real world—and what digital field ticketing can do about them? Below, we break down the most common pain points faced by operations and accounting teams, along with practical solutions and examples from our recent webinar.
1. Endless Paperwork and “Windshield Time”
- Pain point: Field workers and suppliers spend hours driving tickets to offices for approval, wasting time and increasing safety risks.
- Real-world scenario: Picture a service technician finishing a job at a remote well site late in the afternoon. Instead of heading home, they spend another hour driving paper tickets to the nearest field office. The paperwork piles up, and if a ticket gets lost or damaged, payment might be delayed for weeks.
- Digital fix: Mobile and internet-based ticketing slashes travel, keeps everyone safer, and proved invaluable during the pandemic when in-person handoffs were risky.
2. Slow Processing and Payment Delays
- Pain point: Manual ticketing means invoices crawl through approvals, tying up cash flow and frustrating vendors.
- Real-world Scenario: An accounts payable clerk at a mid-sized operator receives a stack of tickets every Monday. Each ticket must be matched to a job, checked for accuracy and routed for approval. With hundreds of tickets a week, bottlenecks are inevitable. Vendors call daily, asking when they’ll get paid. The clerk spends more time chasing signatures than analyzing spend.
- Digital fix: Automated compliance and reconciliation speed up approvals and payments—companies using digital ticketing process invoices 3–4x faster than those relying on paper.
3. Lack of Visibility and Surprise Charges
- Pain point: Operators often don’t know a service was performed until a ticket lands on their desk, making accruals and reporting a guessing game.
- Real-world scenario: A production manager is preparing monthly accruals but discovers several unexpected charges from a service provider. The paper tickets only arrived days after the work was done, leaving little time to investigate discrepancies. The manager scrambles to reconcile costs, often relying on incomplete information.
- Digital fix: Digital ticketing provides real-time visibility, enabling more accurate accruals and better control over field spend.
4. Disputes Over Coding and Ticket Ownership
- Pain point: Most ticket disputes aren’t about price—they’re about coding errors or confusion over who requested the work. Supplier-provided coding often leads to higher dispute rates.
- Real-world scenario: An accountant reviews a ticket coded to the wrong cost center. The supplier, unfamiliar with the operator’s coding structure, picked a code that “looked right.” The ticket is flagged for dispute, triggering a back-and-forth email chain. Weeks pass before the ticket is corrected and paid, frustrating both sides.
- Digital fix: Smart coding and integration with price books automate GL coding, reducing errors and disputes. AI-driven coding is on the horizon, promising even greater consistency.
5. Fraud and Overbilling Risks
- Pain point: Duplicate charges, inflated hours and accidental double-billing are hard to catch with paper tickets.
- Real-world scenario: A supervisor notices that a daily safety charge appears on multiple tickets from the same vendor. With hundreds of tickets to review, catching these duplicates is nearly impossible. Only after a costly audit does the company realize it’s been overpaying for months.
- Digital fix: Digital tickets make it easy to spot anomalies—like a worker charging 30 hours in a day or duplicate safety charges. AI tools are also being developed to flag and auto-dispute suspicious entries.
6. Data Entry Bottlenecks and Delays
- Pain point: The average time from service to ticket submission is over seven days, as field tickets are routed through back-office personnel.
- Real-World scenario: A supplier’s field crew completes a job but waits until the end of the week to submit tickets to their accounts receivable team. The tickets are entered in batches, often with missing or incomplete details. Operators wait days for approval, and any errors mean further delays.
- Digital fix: Digital ticketing enables real-time submission, reducing bottlenecks and freeing up skilled workers for higher-value tasks.
7. Limited Data Insights and Missed Opportunities
- Pain point: With paper-based ticketing, valuable field data is locked away in filing cabinets or scattered spreadsheets, making it nearly impossible to analyze trends, optimize spend or identify operational improvements.
- Real-World scenario: An operations manager wants to understand which vendors are most efficient, which jobs tend to run over budget, or where recurring issues are happening in the field. But with manual tickets, gathering this information means hours of digging through paperwork—if it’s even possible at all. Opportunities to negotiate better rates, improve workflows, or catch recurring problems are missed.
- Digital fix: Digital ticketing centralizes all field data, making it instantly accessible for analysis. Operators can track spend by vendor, job type or location, spot inefficiencies and make data-driven decisions. Advanced analytics and AI tools unlock new insights, helping teams optimize operations and drive continuous improvement.
What’s Next? AI and Automation
The future of field ticketing is bright. AI-powered coding, backup verification and unified reporting are in active development, promising even more automation, fewer disputes and smarter analytics for operations and accounting teams.
Ready to leave field ticketing pain behind? Explore our digital solutions and see how your team can save time, reduce errors and gain real-time control over field operations.