One on One training for you and your pup!
Private Pricing / Package Pricing
A one hour private is $225. A package of 4 one hour in home (or zoom) sessions is $900. After the initial session you have 48 hours to decide to purchase a package.
IMPORTANT NOTE: If multiple parties want to comment / fill out the CBQ, please fill out only ONE CBQ. This applies to the following situations: Both pet parents have different things to say about the dog; both the foster and the rescue want to comment, etc. In the event there are multiple people answering the questions in the CBQ, please have each person choose a different color in the comment section.
Payment
Acceptable forms of payment are PayPal (jamie@smrtdog.com) or Venmo (@Jamie-Bozzi).
IF paying via PayPal please choose friends, if not please add $5 to the total).
The typical private training model is to charge for in-person time with the client only. Technology allows distance learning, teaching, training and consulting. Video consulting provides more flexibility for both the pet parent and the trainer / behavior consultant.
The trainer / behavior consultant can review video and help the client refine training techniques (and mechanical skills and management) to help achieve overall goals. The trainer/ behavior consultant can also help determine the next criteria steps – all of which can be done remotely.
Details of Scheduling and Pricing for Video Consulting Services
Four weeks won’t likely be enough to wrap the case, but it will be enough to make headway and be able to more accurately predict the total time needed. And as additional time is set up after the initial four week period, the number of weekly support hours will be able to be reduced.
Consistency is the key to all training, and that’s especially true of training and behavior modification cases. Not committing to and being consistent with the training plan regularly can result in setbacks. Each setback adds to the time it takes to reach the final goal.
A CBQ is a detailed intake form that provides relevant information for the behavior consultant. The CBQ is required for a fear, anxiety or aggression issue. The document answers important questions that help provide a broader behavior picture to the behavior consultant and reduces note taking during private training sessions. The CBQ is filled out prior to the initial private consultation. The CBQ must be completed by the pet owner and reviewed by consultant 48 hours prior to booking a session.
Filling out the CBQ is in no way a guarantee of service. We want to ensure that both parties are comfortable with the training plan and/or training methods prior to booking an appointment. Feedback, educational hand outs and other recommendations will be sent to potential client regardless of whether a session is booked.
The CBQ is required for fear, anxiety and/or aggression cases. For basic training the CBQ is not required, but still recommended. The additional information helps the trainer / canine behavior consultant have a better picture of the dog’s daily life and what potential environmental issues might be affecting behavior.
Positive reinforcement training methods
While not ideal, if the potential client is committed to a positive training method, the canine behavior consultant is happy to work with them.
However, it is important to understand that many clients who are not committed don’t see any progress because they put in minimal effort, get frustrated, and try a more aversive approach, believing it to be a quicker fix. There are side effects to punishment based methods that are achieved through the use of aversive training equipment such as choke chains, prong collars and shock collars. Aversive methods have side effects that outweigh the benefits.
This is the purpose of the CBQ. Because the canine behavior consultant uses only positive reinforcement training methods, it is probably not a good fit.
This depends on what issues you are having with your dog. Explaining and demonstrating how to teach simple foundation behaviors can be accomplished in one private session. However, the pet owner must practice the techniques taught.
How proficiently can you learn a new skill, say playing the piano or ice skating after just one or two lessons? It depends. Some skills are simple and can be learned in one session. Other skills take weeks to practice and master. Could you learn to love spiders in one session? Could you learn to overcome a fear or phobia in just one session? Having reasonable expectations and creating a behavior change plan is the first step to achieving success.
Explaining, demonstrating and reviewing proper management and training / Bmod techniques for more severe types of behavior requires more time and resources. How the dog responds to the initial training session(s) will give the canine behavior consultant a better idea of length of time needed to reach training goals.
Successful outcomes – reaching your training goals – depend on several factors: dog’s learning ability, motivating factors like food and toys, your comfort level with the action plan, and your commitment to the training and behavior change plan.
It is important for the pet owner to have reasonable expectations based on the dog’s age, breed, learning history, developmental stage, and severity of the problem. For example, your dog has bitten several people and dogs and your goal is to have a dog that is perfectly safe around all dogs and all people. This is not a realistic goal. Another example would be your dog is reactive (barking and lunging) at other dogs while on leash. Your goal is to be able to walk your dog in the neighborhood with less reactivity. That is a reasonable goal.
“Behavior is not something you fix. You can’t unlearn what you have learned. It will always be in your learning history, but you can build a stronger and more recent history for different behavior.” Agnieszka Janarek
For example, if your dog pulls on leash, don’t focus on stopping the pulling behavior. Instead, focus on teaching your dog the skill of making eye contact with you while moving. Teach a connection and focus game. Teach your dog what TO DO. Focus on small successes and build on what is working.
SMRTDOG and its trainers/consultants may change their policies at any time, with or without notice or updating the website.
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