When I took home a fearful yorkie as a foster I had to figure out how to bring him into the world where he could feel safe (without spoiling him) but still be a well mannered dog at the same time. This was the first program that he was placed on. It went very well and within six weeks he was through it. Though he is still on the management program this was his first step into not being afraid of the world.
Susan Garrett's success is undeniable and her deeply bonded relationship with her dogs is a huge part of that. Her system of "Ruff Love" isn't hard on the dog--it develops your dog's self-control so that he can be trusted with nearly everything, making his world wide and wonderful. It's the same concept as your infant can't be trusted to use Legos responsibly. A dog that has too much freedom too quickly doesn't realize he's misbehaving by barking in excitement, jumping on guests, or chewing his favorite Louboutin chew toys, and as a result is kept away and isolated. It's only "Ruff Love" on the owner, who naturally wants to love and spoil their new, adorable dog, but this inadvertently creates bad behavior. This system is a great system and the only cost is delaying the oh-so-enjoyable spoiling your dog until they have the impulse control to handle it without going off the deep end. It's not a strictly unique system; it's very similar to Ian Dunbar's puppy system and many other positive-only trainers have common key components. This isn't a bad thing; it shows it works. If you're a visual learner, watch Sympawtico's excellent videos on YouTube, especially "Puppy Training - The Puppy Play Den!", "Chew Toy Training - 5 Tips to Cew Toy Train Your Dog", and his series on crate training games.
First time I read this I thought no way didn't apply all of what the book's plan set out, (didn't make sense at the time) however once I subscribed to Susan's blog's and took the "Home School The Dog" Program and "Crate Game" program did I totally 'get' what Susan wrote about in the Ruff Love book. Susan totally 'gets' what is needed in dog communications and getting the dog to achieve what we are wanting from them. A must read.
The overall training philosophy here is perfect for behaviour modification. The amount of crate time used is a bit much for for my taste, so it’s not a program I would use in its entirety, but this is still an excellent guide for new people with either a challenging adult rescue or a high-drive puppy. And the charts in the final reference section are fantastic.
If you like your dog well enough, you're just interested in getting a little bit more out of him, don't get this book. I don't know many people who can actually stick to the Ruff Love program -- I think for most people, it's a bit much, when 'all' they want is a strong recall.
If you're interested in training a competition dog, or you think your relationship with your dog has a real problem, get this book, stick to the program.