Best Dog Training in Colorado Springs

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Dog Training
Experts In Colorado Springs

Sit Means Sit Dog Training Colorado Springs provides professional dog training in Colorado Springs and surrounding Colorado areas.

We provide exceptional obedience training for puppies and dogs of all breeds, sizes, and temperaments. We employ the Sit Means Sit dog training system to help our clients train their dogs to be happy obedient dogs with off leash control around severe distractions. We also specialize in training dogs with severe aggression and temperament issues. We make it fun and informative so you can accomplish this goal quickly!

Our puppy training programs are results oriented and we back it up with life time training to insure our clients have support for all the phases and changes in their dog’s life. Contact us today for a free consultation!

We are a certified Canine Good Citizen® (CGC) test evaluator.

We have partnered with Scheels to help veterans in need by donating service dogs.

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About Sit Means Sit Dog Training

Dog Training Classes

Any Dog Any Age Any Problem

Puppy Management

Puppy Management

Get off to a great start with your puppy! This quick start program gives you straight answers on the FAQs of how to care for and teach your new puppy. Let us help you to avoid the common mistakes that lead to future problems.

We’ll guide you to understand the importance of management systems and to get your dog potty trained. Additionally, we show you the fundamental methods for using food, praise, leashes, and toys to start the process of creating an engaging relationship with your new puppy.

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Obedience Training

Obedience Training

This is really what Sit Means Sit is all about – happy obedient dog that is controllable in the face of severe distractions! Training in our Obedience Training Program includes:

  • Come
  • Sit
  • Down
  • Place
  • Waiting at doors and cross walks
  • Housebreaking
  • Car manners
  • Loose leash and off leash walking.

We help you establish boundaries in your home and yard and create enforceable rules for furniture. We teach how to stop nuisance behaviors like jumping up, play biting, digging, chewing and excessive barking or other vocalizations.

For the safety of your dog, we also train obedience commands like sit, down and place at a distance so that you’ll be able to stop or direct your dog when they are not in your space.

If your dog has behavioral problems like marking in the house, aggression or separation anxiety we’re going to help you fix that too.

This program includes our Group Training Program. You can choose to get the benefits of this program by choosing the Private Lessons Program or the Board and Train Program.

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Private Lessons

Private Lessons

This program is for the dog owner who wants to be part of every phase of the dog’s training. Our trainers work one on one with you in private lessons to teach all the skills you and your dog require to achieve the goal of great obedience around severe distractions.

Lessons will be at your home or at a place near you that you choose. We’ll train with you and your dog to learn the skills listed in our Obedience Training Program. Once you and your dog have reached a satisfactory level of proficiency, you’ll be invited to attend lessons in our Group Training Program.

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Board and Train

Board and Train

In this program, your dog will stay in the care of our staff at our training facility. During their stay, your dog will be training daily with our professional dog trainers. Working with our staff, your dog will quickly learn the commands we teach in the Obedience Training Program.

At the end of your dog’s stay with us, we bring your dog home and do private lessons with you to show what the dog has learned and what the you need to do to keep your dog working well for you. Once the you and your dog have reached a level of proficiency, obtained in private lessons, you’ll be invited to enter our Group Training Program.

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Group Training

Group Training

Group training is critical component in training your dog to be a “Good Citizen”

Our Group Training Program is unlimited for the first year. However, we firmly believe dogs must complete private training before they are ready for group training. Therefore, clients must first train in the Private Lessons Program or a Board and Train Program before being graduated to the Group Training Program.

Once ready, clients can come to as many group classes as they want for the first year. Group training is designed to give our clients the opportunity to continue their dog’s training and proof skills with the distraction of other people and dogs. In general, we provide these benefits at group training:

  • Socialize dogs with people in the manner of a “Good Citizen”
  • Opportunity for clients to be social with other dog owners
  • Drills to proof elements of training in a distracting environment
  • Drills that help clients increase their dog’s level of attention and performance
  • Drills to build confidence in all dogs, especially helpful for fearful dogs
  • Drills to reform aggressive dogs
  • Drills to help dogs can become neutral in their response to other people and dogs.
  • Trainers point out common failing points and offer tips for success when dogs are in social situations.
  • Drills and tips that enable clients to prepare for the Canine Good Citizen test and move into therapy work
  • Tips on tricks and games to play
  • Tips on things to work on at home during the week
  • Access to trainers for clients get face to face advice on any training concerns
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FAQs

Get answers to some of our most commonly asked questions:

Each of our training programs is custom-tailored to the specific situation. There are a number of factors that we evaluate prior to building a training package for you, such as your dog’s age, temperament, previous training, as well as the desired goals of the dog's parents. What will work for one dog and owner won’t necessarily fit well with another. Because of these factors, we offer a free demonstration & consultation as an opportunity to meet with your family as well as your dog to gain insight into the unique circumstances that affect your dog’s training. During the demonstration, we will evaluate the factors and develop a training plan for your dog and family. From the training plan, we will be able to give you an accurate idea of the cost to accomplish your goals. There is no cost or obligation associated with the free demonstration.

Sit Means Sit uses a variety of training methods and training aids to achieve the goals of our dog owners and their pets.

The Sit Means Sit mission:

Revolutionizing the quality of life with happy, obedient, and confident dogs.

With this mission in-mind, we customize our training sessions to meet with our customer's personality as well as what will result in the best possible training experience for both dog and owner. As you view our portfolio of dog training videos, we hope that you will pay close attention to the attitude of all the dogs trained by Sit Means Sit. We pride ourselves on being able to maintain a happy and relaxed attitude in our dogs.

Sit Means Sit specializes in a diversified approach to dog training. We use an attention-based dog training system developed by Founder and CEO, Fred Hassen. This approach utilizes a variety of training tools to enable our trainers to gain the dog’s attention even in distracting situations. One of the tools that we use often in our training program is our customized Sit Means Sit Collar (remote electronic dog training collar). The reason we choose to utilize technology in our training is obvious when you understand the advantages that technology allows us.

Firstly, Sit Means Sit firmly believes in safe dog training. The technology we employ is 100% safe for dogs and humans. The Sit Means Sit Collar uses state of the art digital technology to control the output from the collar to prevent it from harming your dog. The technology that is utilized in the construction of our collar is similar technology to “electronic muscle stimulators” and “TENS” units. You may be familiar with the use of these devices in the medical field (they are very common in the Chiropractic and Physical Therapy fields) or perhaps you’ve seen devices advertised on TV as “electronic muscle massagers”. These devices essentially use low-level, adjustable electronic stimulation to creating muscle contractions. In the medical field, they are used as tools to help alleviate pain, promote blood circulation and encourage healing.

Dog Trainer With Experience

In the dog training field, specifically Sit Means Sit, remote dog training collars are used as a tool to provide a remote controlled cue. The cue is designed to neither cause pain nor to disrupt the dog’s emotional state, but rather to function as an adjustable “tap”. The approach used by Sit Means Sit trainers is to treat the “tap” from the collar as a cue for the dog to pay attention. This is no different than tapping a person on the shoulder to gain their attention. The goal of tapping them on the shoulder is not to hurt them or cause emotional distress, but rather to let them know that you want to communicate something to them.

The “tap” delivered from the Sit Means Sit Collar is a highly adjustable sensation that can be set to levels that are often imperceptible to people. Obviously this adjustability is necessary because some dogs are sensitive, while others are quite tough. There is no way to determine what levels your dog will respond to until you begin to train them with a collar. Another reason why the collars are so adjustable is because distractions from the environment are never consistent. Relate this to training with a treat. How many times will that treat work perfectly indoors, but fails to maintain your dog’s attention when a cat is running by. Sit Means Sit has found that dogs can be taught to pay attention around extreme distractions very effectively.

During the fundamental Sit Means Sit training, the dogs and handlers are taught how to condition their dog to the collar in a constructive and positive manner. By adjusting the level of the collar appropriately for the dog and the situation, as well as linking the tap from the collar with an item of high value, we can effectively teach the dog that the “tap” from the collar is related to something of value. This approach to fundamentals allows for a smooth transition into distraction training and off leash control through attention to command.

You can relate the advantages that a Sit Means Sit Collar can provide you in dog training with the advantages that a state-of-the-art smartphone provides you. Cell phones these days are no longer just phones, but mini-computers with built-in cameras, internet access and applications. These tools enhance our communication with others, allow for a diversified means of gathering and sharing information as well it’s just flat out cool what can be done with them, provided you have the knowledge. You can still choose to use you old-fashioned wall-mount telephone in your kitchen if you like, but now you’re restricted to the the length of the cord, and it’s not exactly easy to send photos to your in-laws using that wall-mount phone. Effectively limiting what you can do while you’re talking on the phone. There’s nothing wrong with doing things that way, it’s just limiting. This same relationship can also be said of using a leash to train your dog. It’s just limiting. With a smartphone you can do it all from the convenience of wherever you want.

Building on the premise of safety, the use of a remote controlled cue allows for greater freedom of communication, and in turn more efficient training through the enhancement of near-instantaneous timing. Being able to re-direct your dog’s energy or attention while he is at a distance from you greatly enhances the reliability you can achieve in a short period of time. It's also allows for you to communicate with your dog without confrontation from yelling. Also, the uniqueness of the Sit Means Sit approach stands head and shoulders above other technology-based dog training systems because of our ability to establish a neutral communication system allowing for unprecedented problem solving abilities, and through our enhanced communication skills a truly politically correct training approach. We invite you to view our training first-hand by contacting us for a free demonstration with a local trainer.

Training with a remote dog training collar like the Sit Means Sit dog training collar is really no different than training your dog with a leash or with treats. Reinforcement in any form is a required and necessary part of your dog’s life. Even after they are trained, it will still be necessary to maintain your rules and boundaries. This is really no different than we encounter with people learning to drive a car. Obtaining your driver’s license only shows that you understand the rules of the road, and have demonstrated your ability to operate a car safely. It does not guarantee that you will stop at every stop sign, and drive the speed limit all the time. Obviously there are a lot of factors that change as you drive, and some drivers are more honest than others. The bottom line however is that there are police officers responsible for maintaining the law and enforcing the rules that we have agreed to.

When looking at dog training from this standpoint, it easy to see how reinforcement of rules will be inevitable at some point. Every dog is different though, and some dogs require more or less reinforcement than others.

The good news is that proper and thorough training will result in your dog being more reliable even without training equipment or training ‘aids’ as we call them. Training your dog to be reliable without a Sit Means Sit dog training collar on is a matter of transferring attention through conditioning. There are three broad phases of training that you will encounter as you train your dog. Sticking with the your training and reinforcing your rules consistently over a long enough period of time will get your dog as reliable as they can be. The phases of training are as follows:

Phase 1: The Teaching/Control Phase ~ 6-12+ weeks

During phase one, the goal is to achieve control over your dog, teach them the rules, boundaries and desired behaviors you want. It also the time to teach the dog to pay attention and perform these commands around distractions. This phase lasts between 6-12 weeks on average, however in certain situations it may take longer to gain the reliability needed before moving on to phase two. Once your dog is capable of performing commands quickly and reliably around a variety of distractions with minimal problem solving required, then your dog and you are ready to move on to phase two.

Phase 2: The Reinforcement Phase ~ 6-12+ weeks

During phase two, the goal is to begin phasing out your training aid (remote dog training collar). In phase one, we use the dog training collar on a regular basis to regain attention and maintain our rules. Now in phase two we begin to reduce our dependence on the dog training collar and introduce consistency via variable reinforcement. You may or may not need your dog training collar, but we want to teach the dog that you are still in control even if the perception of the dog is that you are not. This phase will last between 6 – 12 weeks on average, and will require you to stick with phase two for longer than average. It’s also not uncommon as dogs mature and age to have to revert back into phase one training again for several weeks depending on how your dog’s performance and behavior is. When your dog is capable of performing commands without the need for reinforcement for approximately 6 weeks, then your dog is very likely to be reliable without their training aid present. We are ultimately looking to have your dog learn how to filter our distractions entirely. When this is achieved, your dog is much less likely to act out in an unwanted manner because of distractions.

Phase 3: The Maintenance Phase ~ Ongoing

The third and final phase of training a dog is the maintenance phase. During this phase, you will likely be using your dog training collar or other dog training aid very little as your dog is capable of ignoring distraction. The catch however is that they are still capable of distraction (they are not robots). A smart trainer recognizes this and is ready to maintain their rules, commands and boundaries at anytime. It is not uncommon to have a dog who sense the lack of maintenance and begins to revert back in their behavior. The benefit of having done your dog training properly to begin with is that regression is easily minimized and dealt with by simply jumping back into training for a short time to remind the dog of the expectations.

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Dog Trainers & Staff

Professional trainers. Attentive friendly staff.

Cindy HuntOwner/Trainer

Cindy has been working with dogs for over 20 years and is dedicated to helping you achieve your goals with your dog. Cindy has achieved AKC Champion Titles on 9 dogs and qualified for the AKC National Eukanuba Invitational two years in a row.

She enjoys many dog sports including DockDogs and AKC Conformation. Most recently, Cindy has been competing and titling her dogs, Mick and Ghent and Ezra, in a protection sport called Mondioring.

Clay HuntOwner/Trainer

Clay joined Cindy in training at Sit Means Sit in 2009. Having watched Cindy perform miracle after miracle transforming the lives of people and their dogs, it was an easy decision. Clay especially enjoys working with the troubled dogs.

There is no greater feeling than changing lives for the better. The satisfaction that comes from seeing an aggressive or fearful dog becoming an upstanding confident member of society is difficult to describe.

His own dog, Watson, is a rescue that had behavioral problems – you’d never know it now! Clay loves living, training and working with his dogs, Watson and Scooby – they’re great partners in the training other people’s dogs.

Micah Aeberli

Micah AeberliHead Trainer

Micah has been working with dogs since he was a child. His love of dog training lead him to join Sit Means Sit in 2008. He enjoys living the Colorado lifestyle with his wife, two daughters, and his two dogs, Riley and Tucker.

Zach

ZachManager/Trainer

Zach was born and raised in Connecticut before moving to Colorado. He has a passion for staying active and healthy living. On his days off he can be found exploring the mountains with his dog Oakley. He has a long customer service and hospitality background and takes pride in being able to help others. Zach is passionate about helping other dog owners achieve the same lifestyle and freedom he has grown to love with his dog.

Skylar

SkylarTrainer

Skylar grew up knowing she would work with animals. She graduated from UCCS in 2020 with a bachelors in Biology. Her love for animals and their behavior grew when she started raising her Australian Shepherd, Gaia, shortly after joining Sit Means Sit. Skylar is a AKC CGC evaluator and heads up the Paws to Serve therapy dog training at Sit Means Sit Colorado Springs.

Mike

MikeTrainer

Mike grew up in Wray, Colorado and has worked with Sit Means Sit for over 2 years. He has a 2 year old Belgian Malinois named Ragnar as well as a 12 year old Rottweiler named “Leo”. Mike not only has experience with the Sit Means Sit system training both basic and advanced obedience, but he likes to train protection work in his personal time with Ragnar.

Julia

JuliaTrainer

Julia was born and raised in Colorado Springs, and attended Pikes Peak State College where she achieved a Zoology degree. She has worked with all different kinds of animals but truly finds her passion training dogs and helping owners live better lives because of it. She has a Black Mouth Cur mix named Lincoln as well as her 2 cats.

Todd

ToddTrainer

Todd grew up here in Colorado Springs and attended New Mexico State University (Go Aggies!). You might find him and his dog Money exploring the mountains on his days off. While Money prefers to chase frisbees, Todd enjoys playing golf and fishing whenever they can.

Justin

JustinTrainer

Justin was born and raised in Topeka, Kansas but has been in Colorado since 2013. He has been working with dogs in the Colorado Springs area for over 4 years now and has been with Sit Means Sit for the majority of that time. He has an American Pit Bull Terrier named Riley who he adopted from the humane society back in 2014. Justin and Riley love going on hikes, playing fetch, and having lazy days together!

Loren

LorenTrainer

Loren is from San Diego, California but grew up in Arizona and Texas. He spent 27 years in the military serving in both the Marine Corps and the Army. The majority of his time in service was as a Green Beret in the Army Special Forces. He has always had dogs and has discovered his love for dog training.

When he wasn’t deployed his specialties were weapons and mountaineering, and he worked as a firefighter on the side. Nowadays in his time off he enjoys playing with his dogs, playing guitar, traditional archery, and riding his motorcycle.

Service Areas

We proudly serve the following areas in Colorado Springs.

Counties

  • El Paso

Cities

  • Colorado Springs
  • Monument
  • Palmer Lake
  • Calhan
  • Cascade
  • Fountain
  • Manitou Springs
  • Peyton
  • Ramah
  • Rush
  • USAFA
  • Woodland Park
  • Yoder
  • Black Forest
  • Green Mountain Falls

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Sit Means Sit has 157 locations across the US and Canada.

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Dog Training Videos

Check out a few videos to see our dog trainers at work!

SMS Dog Training Overview

 

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Small Dog Training

A Tour of Sit Means Sit Dog Training Colorado Springs

5 Star Reviews

We love customers and their dogs. They love us.

Tanya C.

I recommend everything about Sit Means Sit. The staff are all very knowledgeable and friendly, the facility is extremely clean and the training my dog and I got was amazing! I have already made many recommendations!😊

Amber B.

Sit Means Sit has been a fantastic place for our dog. We took him to the day training once a week and his transition from not listening to being an obedient pup has been fantastic! The staff is friendly, helpful and attentive to both dog owner and dogs. I would highly recommend this place to…

Mario R.

Can’t say enough good things about this group. I saw a “Sit Means Sit” display set up at “Territory Days” a few years back and said if I were to ever get another dog I would use them. The experience has been excellent. My dog is happy, trained to be off leash, and listens. Any…

Brian K.

The entire staff at Sit Means Sit are amazing , they want you to succeed in the training with you dog. You learn as much as your dog and they are always available to help you. Zena’s training behavior amazes us , Thank You!!