You're the expert. FetchCoach reinforces what you teach — between weekly sessions, when owners need a nudge to practice and a place to log progress on the skills you've assigned.
Most training progress stalls because owners stop practising three days after a session. FetchCoach addresses exactly that.
Walks owners through the same cue → mark → reward → praise sequence you already taught, rep by rep. Consistent mechanics between sessions, not just during them.
Daily check-ins cover what owners most commonly forget: potty timing, feeding routine, leash walks, and scheduled skill drills. It makes "practice every day" feel manageable.
Owners log reps and sessions for skills in their curriculum. Foundations, sit, touch, default sit, auto check-in, the three D's — whatever you assigned, they can track it.
We built FetchCoach to support trainers, not to cut them out of the picture. Here's where the boundary is.
FetchCoach can't observe your client's dog, evaluate body language, or assess reactivity triggers. You can. Nothing in the app changes that.
Clinical issues — serious separation anxiety, aggression, fear responses that need a behaviourist or DACVB — are explicitly referred out. The app names that boundary clearly.
The app supports whatever curriculum you've assigned. It's not a competing training programme — it's practice scaffolding around yours.
We're not trying to replace you with AI. Every coaching response is designed to send owners back to their trainer — that's you — for anything that requires real expertise.
Every coaching prompt, every skill drill, every methodology reference in FetchCoach is grounded in science-backed, force-free positive reinforcement. We follow AVSAB guidance. We reference Karen Pryor, Susan Garrett, and the R+ training canon. We do not hedge.
The foundational loop we teach owners:
Jason got Baelor — a 3 months-old pup — in late January 2026 and immediately started working with a trainer out of Calgary. Weekly sessions. Great trainer. Real progress.
The problem: by Wednesday he'd forgotten what they'd worked on. The drills felt vague. He wasn't practising consistently. All the momentum from Monday's session would evaporate by the time the next one rolled around.
He built FetchCoach for himself first — a coach in his pocket that remembered what Baelor had been working on, walked him through the reps, and kept the R+ mechanics consistent. Not to replace his trainer. To make himself a better student between sessions.
Request a trainer referral code. You give it to your clients; they get founding-member pricing on FetchCoach. You get attribution. No commitment, no cost.
Fill this in and we'll follow up with your personal code within one business day.
This page exists because my own trainer is reading it.
If you train dogs and you have feedback — about the methodology, the curriculum, anything that would make this more useful for your clients — email me directly: jason@peakcorridor.com