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How To Teach Your Doberman To Stop Jumping On People

| Published on March 3, 2017

Of course it’s cute when your Doberman puppy comes up to you and puts his paw on your leg for attention. But when that puppy grows into an adult Dobie and is throwing approximately 70 pounds on you, it becomes less cute. Jumping on people is a learned behavior that dogs do because, in the past, it’s gotten them something they wanted. Luckily, that means we can change this habit with a bit of training and patience. The following is how to teach your Doberman to stop jumping on people.

Why Your Doberman Jumps On People

Dogs are opportunistic creatures. This means if they can do something to get what they want, they will. As mentioned above, jumping up usually starts when your Doberman is a puppy and he puts his cute little paws on you to get your attention. Understandably, you couldn’t resist. But your puppy just learned that putting his two front paws on you gets him what he wants and he will do it more in the future. So unless your Doberman is jumping on people out of fear or aggression (in which case you should seek a professional dog trainer for help), he is doing it because it gets him what he wants – attention, a toy, food, etc. The good news is that this makes it easy to stop the behavior. All you have to do is make sure your Dobie is not being rewarded for it. Then, give him another behavior to do instead that is rewarded. Problem solved.

3 Steps To Getting Your Doberman To Not Jump On People

Image Source: flightlog Via Flickr

#1 – Stop Rewarding The Jumping

Every time your Doberman jumps on someone that person needs to ignore her completely. The best thing to do is turn around and walk away. Even if they shout “down,” “no,” and/or push her away – negative attention is still attention. The trick is that every single person, 100 percent of the time, needs to do this. One person saying “oh I don’t mind” and then giving your Dobie what she wants will make the behavior stronger. So insist upon your rules.

#2 – Ask For A Conflicting Behavior

Most people ask for a sit. Your Doberman can’t sit and jump up at the same time. There are two ways to do this: wait for your dog to offer a sit, or give the cue Sit and then reward her when she responds. The reward should be whatever your Doberman was jumping on you for in the first place – petting, a toy, a treat, even his food dish! Anything your Doberman normally jumps up on you for, she now only gets if she is sitting. If your Dobie is very young or really overzealous, you may need to start by rewarding a calm “four on the floor” first, then work towards a sit as your Doberman learns self-control. You will wait until she is standing quietly and then reward. This takes some training and patience, but it will work because, as mentioned above, dogs repeat behaviors that get them what they want.

#3 – Management

This is the last piece of the puzzle, and it’s what you have to do while your Doberman is learning to sit for things, which won’t happen overnight. You can help your Doberman by holding them lightly when greeting new people, as long as they are comfortable with that and the attention they are receiving. Having your Dobie drag a leash off his harness can also help with jumping for a couple of reasons. It’s useful when you meet that pesky person who lets (or worse, encourages!) your Dobie to jump on them, or maybe you are in a situation that is just too exciting for him at this point in his training to remember his manners. You can just step on the leash so he can’t physically practice the behavior, or you can lead him away from the person altogether, let him calm down, and then bring him back to try the greeting when he is more settled.

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