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A man standing on grass holding a leash with a black dog in a suburban yard with houses and trees in the background.

What you’ll learn:

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Got issues with leash pulling? I got you, learn step by step how to help your dog learn to walk with you not against you.

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You got a puppy and don’t know where to start? I’ll break it down for you.

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Don’t want a boring dog? Turn peoples heads by teaching your dog party tricks that can be done anywhere.

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Does your dog not listen to you when you call them? Let’s build a sold RECALL together so they want to race back to you.

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  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Food and Cars

    Two of the biggest distractions—food and movement. This lesson teaches you how to maintain control and reinforce recall when it matters most.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Sidewalk

    Take your recall into real-life scenarios. Learn how to work your dog on sidewalks with movement, people, and everyday distractions.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Scaling Distractions

    Build your recall step-by-step by adding distractions the right way. This lesson shows you how to progress without overwhelming your dog.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Call Off With Food

    Use food strategically to reinforce calling your dog off distractions without creating dependency. Learn how to reward without weakening the command.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Call Off

    Teach your dog to disengage from distractions and come back to you on command. This is where recall becomes real-world reliable.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Ending Command

    Don’t undo your recall by ending it wrong. Learn how to properly finish the command so your dog stays engaged and doesn’t start avoiding coming to you.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Runaway

    Turn recall into a game your dog wants to win. Learn how to use movement and engagement to make your dog chase you and build a faster, more excited response.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Timing and Rewards

    Timing is everything. This lesson breaks down when and how to reward so your dog clearly understands that coming to you is what pays.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Leash

    Learn how to use the leash as a training tool to guide, reinforce, and follow through on your recall so your dog understands the command every time.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Environment

    Recall changes depending on where you are. This lesson shows you how to use different environments to build reliability and prevent your dog from ignoring you outside.

  • • 5/2/26

    Recall – Intro

    Build the foundation of recall the right way. In this lesson, you’ll learn how to introduce the command, create clarity, and set your dog up for success before adding distractions.

  • • 1/28/26

    E-Collar for Recall

    (Distance, Reliability, Accountability)

    This video shows how to use the e-collar to build a reliable recall, even at distance. The focus is on clarity, timing, and fairness — not punishment. We reinforce the dog’s understanding while maintaining drive and confidence.

    A properly trained recall is freedom earned, not forced.

  • • 3/9/26

    Solidifying Recall With E-Collar

    In this video we take recall to the next level using the e-collar as a communication tool. The goal isn’t punishment — it’s clarity. You’ll learn how to reinforce the recall command so your dog understands that coming back to you isn’t optional, even in high distraction environments. This session focuses on timing, pressure, and rewarding the correct choice so recall becomes reliable anywhere.

  • Recall

    Building a Reliable Recall

Your instructor

A man and a black and white dog are close together outdoors under a blue sky with some clouds. The man is leaning in next to the dog, and the dog is lying with its head resting on a yellow surface.

Steven Jankovic

I didn’t land in dog training by accident. I got here the hard way. I chased golf, writing, management, big numbers, big titles — and learned that building something for someone else will never feel like ownership. I’ve burned out, started over, failed publicly, and bet on the wrong things. What I wanted was something that was mine. Something that demanded discipline. Something that scared me enough to grow. Dog training became that proving ground. It started with my own dogs and turned into a calling — building clarity, control, and real connection between people and their dogs. I’m not here because it was easy. I’m here because I chose the hard path for me.