New Puppy or Rescue Dog – 5 Mistakes to Avoid

puppy destruction in the house, tips to help from Go Anywhere Dog®

New Puppy or Rescue Dog?

5 Common Mistakes to Avoid (So You Can Actually Enjoy Each Other)

Bringing home a new puppy or rescue dog is pure magic.

Hope. Excitement. A fresh start.
And—if we’re honest—a whole lot of accidental mistakes made with the very best intentions.

Early experiences matter. A lot. They quietly shape how your dog feels about the world, about people, and about you. The good news? Most missteps are easy to avoid once you know what to look for.

Here are the five most common mistakes we see—and how to sidestep them so you can build a lifetime of joy together.

1. Jumping Up: What Gets Practiced Gets Stronger

When your puppy is tiny, jumping up is adorable.
You laugh. You bend down. You give attention.

Fast-forward a few months.

Now your dog is bigger. It’s raining. You call him inside. He launches joyfully… straight into your clean clothes with muddy paws.

Your dog isn’t being rude.
He’s being consistent.

If jumping up has always worked to get attention, your dog will keep doing it—with everyone.

Here’s the reframe:

  • Jumping up = people go away

  • Four paws on the floor (or sitting) = attention rains down

Teach your dog that sitting is the fastest path to what they want. When jumping happens, calmly remove your attention. No scolding, no pushing, no drama. Then try again and lavish the reward when they get it right.

Avoid yelling or waving your arms—remember, attention is exactly what they were seeking.

2. Socialization: It’s Not Just About Other Dogs

“Socialization” doesn’t mean dog parks and daycare.

In fact, for many puppies, those places can do more harm than good if they’re overwhelming or poorly managed.

The critical socialization window—roughly 3 to 16 weeks—is about exposure with safety.

Your puppy is forming opinions about:

  • People (men, women, kids, hats, boots, sunglasses)

  • Sounds (vacuums, traffic, clanging, barking)

  • Surfaces (slick floors, grates, grass, stairs)

  • Moving objects (bikes, strollers, Roombas)

Early experiences don’t have to be exciting—they need to be neutral or positive.

Ask breeders and rescues what they’ve done during this window. The best ones actively prepare puppies for real life, not just new homes.

Thoughtful exposure now builds confidence for years to come.

3. “Come!” — Don’t Teach Your Dog Not to Come

Recall is one of the most important—and most accidentally sabotaged—skills.

Think about when dogs usually hear “Come!”

  • Leaving the park

  • Going into the crate

  • Nail trims

  • Medicine

  • The end of fun

From your dog’s perspective, coming when called often predicts disappointment.

The fix?
Create an emergency recall that always pays extremely well.

Use a new word or sound. Start when your dog isn’t distracted. Call once—and when they arrive, throw a full-blown party. Praise. Joy. High-value food raining from the sky. Not one treat—many.

Practice casually. Randomly. Joyfully.

Only increase difficulty when your dog is rock-solid at the current level. And never stop rewarding. When your dog chooses you over the environment, that deserves gratitude in their currency.

4. Growls, Snarls & Snaps: Communication, Not “Bad Behavior”

Growling makes people uncomfortable. So we shut it down.

But growls are warnings.
They mean “I’m not okay. Please give me space.”

Punishing a growl doesn’t fix the problem—it removes the warning.

As Ian Dunbar famously warns:

“Don’t remove the ticker from the time bomb.”

The goal isn’t to stop the growl.
The goal is to understand why your dog feels threatened or frustrated—and help them feel safer.

If your dog shows aggressive behaviors, seek qualified professional help immediately. Early support makes an enormous difference.

5. Management: What Is Your Dog Practicing?

Dogs are constantly learning—even when we’re not training.

If:

  • Counter surfing leads to snacks

  • Chewing shoes leads to fun

  • Barking leads to attention

Those behaviors get stronger.

Management is powerful because it quietly shapes habits:

  • Puppies with access only to appropriate chews learn to chew the right things

  • Dogs who can’t rehearse unwanted behaviors don’t build habits around them

When you see a behavior you don’t like, ask:

What reward might my dog be getting from this—and how can I prevent it?

Remove the payoff, and the behavior often fades on its own.

A Strong Start Changes Everything

You don’t need perfection.
You need awareness.

When you understand how dogs actually learn—through consequences, safety, and repetition—you stop fighting behavior and start shaping it.

And that’s how puppies grow into confident, connected dogs who can truly go anywhere. 🐾

 

Until next time, Have Fun & Enjoy Your Dog!

Jody Karow – CTC

Dog Life Coach & Founder of Go Anywhere Dog

P.S. Don’t forget to check out our online dog training program for living your best life with your dog!

P.P.S.  Don’t miss our local services in Minneapolis, Minnetonka & Edina, MN areas providing In Home Puppy & Dog Training Minneapolis and Minneapolis Puppy Classes for a Go Anywhere Dog.

 

 

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Be Your Puppy's Hero
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Jody Karow - CTC

Founder & Lead Dog Life Coach — Go Anywhere Dog®

Helping dogs — and their humans — master the social skills that make a Go Anywhere Dog®. Science-based. Play-driven. Boundaries without trauma®.

Jody Karow is the founder and lead trainer at Go Anywhere Dog® in Eden Prairie, serving families across the Minneapolis metro. With 20+ years of hands-on experience, Jody’s special sauce is social skills—the confidence, play etiquette, and emotional regulation that turn a good puppy into a Go Anywhere Dog®. Her method blends behavioral science with joyful practice: trust first, skills second, obedience that lasts.

Her work sits at the intersection of behavioral science, emotional intelligence, and real-world practice, helping families raise calm, joyful dogs who can truly go anywhere with them. Jody’s guiding principle is simple and unwavering: build trust before obedience. Because the best-behaved dogs aren’t managed—they’re connected.

When she’s not teaching puppies the art of polite play, Jody mentors fellow trainers, writes about dog-human relationships, and explores the trails around the Minneapolis metro with her own Go Anywhere Dogs by her side.

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