Why Rewards Work in Puppy Training (And What Happens When They Don’t)

If rewards “stop working,” it’s rarely because a puppy is stubborn or manipulative. It’s usually because motivation, emotion, or clarity broke down somewhere along the way.

In this video, I explain how rewards actually function in puppy training, why motivation comes before obedience, and what to do when engagement disappears — without resorting to pressure, fear, or force.

Why Rewards Work in Puppy Training

Rewards are one of the most misunderstood tools in dog training.

They’re often framed as bribery.
As something you’ll “have to fade.”
As a shortcut that creates dependency.

But that misunderstanding comes from looking at rewards as objects — instead of understanding them as information.

Rewards don’t create behavior.
They communicate value.

 

Motivation Is the Gateway to Learning

Before a puppy can learn what to do, they have to feel motivated to engage at all.

Motivation answers three essential questions for a puppy:

  • Is this interaction safe?

  • Is it worth participating?

  • Do my actions make sense here?

If the answer to any of those is “no,” learning stalls — no matter how skilled the trainer is.

This is why motivation comes before obedience.
A puppy who feels regulated and engaged will offer behavior freely.
A puppy who feels pressured will either shut down or push back.

 

Rewards Aren’t Bribes — They’re Feedback

A bribe is offered before a behavior to force compliance.

A reward is delivered after a behavior to give feedback:

“Yes. That worked.”

That distinction matters.

Rewards help puppies understand:

  • which choices lead to good outcomes

  • how to repeat behavior successfully

  • when they’re on the right track

This is especially important early in learning, when clarity is fragile and confidence is still forming.

 

When Rewards “Stop Working”

When people say rewards stopped working, what they’re really describing is a break in motivation.

Common causes include:

  • asking for skills in environments that are too overwhelming

  • raising criteria too quickly

  • training when a puppy is tired, stressed, or dysregulated

  • using rewards inconsistently or without clarity

In these moments, the solution isn’t bigger rewards or firmer correction — it’s better information.

That might mean:

  • lowering expectations

  • increasing distance from distractions

  • breaking skills into smaller pieces

  • rebuilding engagement before asking for compliance

 

Why Pressure Backfires

Pressure can produce short-term compliance, but it comes at a cost.

Puppies trained under pressure may:

  • respond slower over time

  • avoid engagement

  • lose curiosity

  • associate learning with stress

Rewards, used correctly, do the opposite.

They build:

  • confidence

  • emotional resilience

  • willingness to try again after mistakes

  • trust in the learning process

That trust is what allows boundaries to be introduced later — without trauma.

 

Fading Rewards the Right Way

Rewards don’t disappear.
They evolve.

As puppies mature and skills stabilize:

  • rewards become more intermittent

  • life rewards replace food (movement, access, play)

  • engagement itself becomes reinforcing

This isn’t something you rush.
It happens naturally when motivation, clarity, and trust are intact.

When people try to remove rewards too early, behavior doesn’t strengthen — it collapses.

 

The Takeaway

Rewards aren’t about spoiling dogs or avoiding boundaries.

They’re about teaching puppies:

  • how to succeed

  • how to stay regulated while learning

  • how to trust that effort is worth it

When motivation is honored first, obedience becomes reliable later.

That’s not permissive training.
That’s developmentally appropriate training.

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Be Your Puppy's Hero
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The Go Anywhere Dog® Guide:
Be Your Puppy’s Hero

Hero Moments:
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 A hero moment is not when you teach a skill. It’s when you protect safety without need for proving anything.
jody-karow-founder-go-anywhere-dog-scaled.jpeg – Go Anywhere Dog®, Minneapolis & Twin Cities, MN, Dog Training

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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