Although Veterinarians have very little education on dog training while going through Vet school, a good bit of the public still relies on them for dog training recommendations. Many Vets need to be commended for taking their own time to be educated on the various successful ways that dogs can be trained. Knowing that their recommendations are a reflection on them as professionals, it’s obviously sensible to research the successful training methods and trainers available to them in their areas since clients are looking for recommendations on ‘successful’ training and not on ‘unsuccessful’ training or trainers. There are many trainers that fall into both categories in various training styles, so they do their best to differentiate and to get educated. Sit Means Sit Dog Training does many free educational demonstrations for Veterinarians throughout the world and brings their dogs along for the staff and people to see.

Ted was a veterinarian with a seven-month-old puppy that needed some training. Sit Means Sit had gone into Ted’s clinic, done some presentations to the employees, and Ted decided to bring his pup to Sit Means Sit for some training. His ultimate goal was to be able to bring his dog to work and let her be off-leash.

At the time of this video, Ted and his dog had only been in professional dog training for just around a week.

One of the nice things about using electronic collar training is there are no extra treats involved. As a professional vet, Ted sees a lot of people giving their pets a cookie or a treat every time they do something good. All this extra stuff can add up over time and help lead to these pets becoming obese.

With e-collar training, Ted, and dog owners just like him, can have control over their pets and still give them the reward of a job well done, without having to feed them every time they perform an action.

There are many misconceptions about electronic collar training for dogs. Some may think it’s mean or cruel, but it’s actually an effective way to teach your dog when done right. The best thing to compare the e-collar to is the tens unit at the chiropractor’s office.

There’s no pain, just a distracting tingling sensation that will allow you to redirect your dog to more positive behaviors.

You can see how dogs respond to the professional dog training from Sit Means Sit in the videos below.


Sit Means Sit North Indy receives a call for an aggressive Pitbull. In fact this dog had just attacked a farm animal. Meeting with the owner, we find out that Atlas is not only animal aggressive, but he is also food, toy and boundary aggressive. Watch this 20-day transformation.

Contact us today to schedule your consultation by calling 708-218-0094 or by filling out our contact us form here.