Why it matters
'Quiet' gives you an off-switch instead of an escalating shouting match. Paired with managing the trigger, it turns nuisance barking into a short, interruptible alert.
Step-by-step: teaching quiet
1. Catch a pause
When your dog stops barking to breathe or reorient — even for a second — calmly say 'quiet' and feed a treat. You're labeling the silence, not commanding it yet.
Tip A soft kissy noise or a treat dropped on the floor can create the pause you need to reward.
2. Reward growing gaps
Pay 1 second of quiet, then 3, then 5, then 10. If barking restarts before the treat, no drama — just wait for the next pause.
3. Cue before the pause
Once 'quiet' reliably predicts a treat, say it during mild barking. Most dogs stop to collect. Reward the silence generously.
4. Practice at real triggers
Set up controlled versions of the trigger (recorded doorbell at low volume, a friend walking past). Cue quiet, reward silence, repeat.
5. Combine with management
Quiet works best alongside removing the trigger — block window views, add white noise. A cue can't out-compete a dog with a full-time window-watching job.
Common mistakes
- Yelling 'quiet' — loud human noises read as you barking along.
- Rewarding too late, after barking has restarted.
- Expecting quiet to fix the underlying trigger without any management.
- Using it so often without payment that the word becomes background noise.