
Are Dog Training Awards Really Proof of Skill?
Are Dog Training Awards Really Proof of Skill?
In recent years, there seems to have been an explosion of “award-winning” dog trainers.
Every week, another trainer appears online announcing they’ve won:
Dog Trainer of the Year
Best Dog Training Service
Business Excellence Award
Specialist of the Year
At first glance, this sounds incredibly impressive.
But it raises an important question:
Do business awards actually prove someone is a skilled dog trainer?
Sometimes they may reflect a good reputation, strong branding, or positive customer service.
But in many cases, these awards tell you very little about the actual training ability, experience, knowledge, or results of the trainer themselves.
Many business awards are aimed at marketing and promotion rather than independently assessing dog training skill. Some involve nomination systems, public voting, online visibility, or optional paid promotional packages after winning. Critics have increasingly questioned whether some awards are more about publicity than proven expertise.
That does not automatically make every award meaningless.
But as dog owners, we should be careful not to confuse:
“good marketing”
with
“high-level dog training skill.”
What Actually Matters More?
Personally, I believe a trainer’s real achievements and client results are far more valuable indicators.
For example:
Have they trained and competed successfully with their own dogs?
Have they produced dogs performing at high levels consistently?
Can they demonstrate real training skill in person?
Do their dogs look happy, engaged, and well-trained?
Do clients return repeatedly?
Do clients achieve their own goals?
Can the trainer adapt to different dogs and handlers?
Are they continuing to learn and improve?
These things are much harder to fake.
Client Reviews Matter More Than Trophies
One of the most valuable things a trainer can have is genuine client feedback.
Not just star ratings, but real stories:
nervous dogs gaining confidence,
owners finally enjoying walks,
teams reaching competition goals,
relationships improving,
owners feeling empowered and educated.
Those experiences tell you far more about a trainer than a shiny logo on social media.
A trainer with years of successful clients, proven results, and respected work within the dog community often carries far more weight than someone collecting business awards.
Real Recognition Comes From the Dogs
In the dog world, genuine respect is usually earned over time.
It comes from:
the quality of the dogs produced,
consistency,
ethics,
sportsmanship,
knowledge,
and the ability to help both dogs and owners succeed.
Titles, demonstrations, competition success, teaching ability, and long-term client relationships are all things that require real skill, not simply good branding.
Choose a Trainer Carefully
When looking for a dog trainer, don’t be afraid to look beyond the “award-winning” headline.
Instead, ask:
Can I see their own dogs work?
What have they actually achieved?
What do previous clients say?
Do I like their training style?
Are the dogs enjoying the process?
Does the trainer explain things clearly?
Do they continue their own education?
Would I trust them with my own dog?
Awards may look impressive.
But in dog training, the real proof is usually standing right in front of you on the end of the lead.
