I have a greyhound and a clicker - do I use the clicker... uhhhh, no... I could though, I am just too lazyI do like the clicker method - it usually is faster/instantly than a praise word and another huge benefit, it always sounds the same, whereas your voice changes (louder, softer, mood depending, etc). My problem was/is, that I constantly forget the clicker, so use my voice instead.
You have to start training slowly and as always, it depends on the dog how fast he picks it up, some are super fast, others need longer. To get a dog used to a clicker (yes, in some cases dogs are scared by the noise), you go somewhere quiet without a lot of distraction and have some favourite treats with you. You then click and reward immediately with a treat. Repeat that multiple times and repeat that over a couple of days. The dog will learn that the click means a reward follows. So it is important that you always have a treat ready to give when you click. It doesn't work when you cliok and then have to grab in the bag to get a treat!
If you have a dog that already knows commands like sit, drop, etc., you simply give the command e.g. "sit!" and as soon as his bottom hits the ground, you click and reward. Imagine you want to capture exactly that moment with a camera, not before he sits and not after he sat down but just as soon as he sits you would release the trigger. That is exactly the moment you need to click.
If you want to train a dog/puppy, who doesn't know any commands you are supposed to wait until they do an action without you saying a command and then click. The dog soon will see the connection - ah, if I do this, I get a reward. If he does that constantly you start using the command, too. Don't confuse the dog by rewaridng everything, just start with one exercise. If you don't want to wait until he does something, you can use the treat to lure him into the right position - for example for the sit, you lure the treat close to him and lift it slightly over his head, this will make him lift his head and lower his bottom to the ground.
A word to the treats:It needs to be something that the dog LOVES, would do anything for to get it, so to speak. There are dogs that are more food orientated, some prefer to play a game with his favourite ball, rope, etc. This you need to cut out of his normal life and just use for rewarding your dog. What this means is, that if your dog loooves cheese, never give him any cheese unless you are training him. And... with clicker training they say a raisin for a polar bear! So only tiny, tiny bits for a dog; the tinier the dog, the tinier the treats! If the dog does something exeptionally well, give him a jackpot, maybe 3-4 treats at once. And always end the training session on a positive note! If training doesn't go well, end the training with something you know he does well and give him a jackpot and a cuddle. If you feel frustrated, again, end the session with something positive or - don't start training in the first place. Dogs pick up on your mood, it influences the training.
Oh gosh, here I go again... talk and talk and talk:blink: