POTTY TRAINING • EXCEPTIONAL CANINES™ 3 / 10 IOU METHOD

Potty Training That Actually Holds

You don’t improvise potty training. You design it. This page walks you through the exact system: one door, one spot, one cue sequence, one tracking method, and a structure your dog can actually understand.

Quick Truth

Dogs don’t care where they go to the bathroom. We do. Humans use their eyes. Dogs use their nose. That’s why this has to be taught clearly, repeated consistently, and tracked so you stop guessing.

Start Here • Read Once

How to Use This Potty Training Page Without Melting Your Brain

Quick truth: if you try to do everything at once, nothing sticks. If you do one thing well, progress shows up fast.

Quick Start

Do These First

Run One System
One door. One spot. One door phrase. One go phrase. Same timing. Same payoff.
Control Freedom
IOU means your dog is either in a crate, on a leash, or under your direct supervision. No backstage pass yet.
Track Everything
Document food, water, pee, poop, accidents, and when they did not go so the pattern becomes obvious instead of emotional.
Best use: read Module 1 and Module 2 first, download the potty log, then run the same system for a full week before changing anything.
Module 1

Why Potty Training Falls Apart

Potty training does not usually fall apart because your dog is stubborn, manipulative, or secretly plotting against your flooring.

It usually falls apart because structure gets loose, timing drifts, and supervision fades.

What People Do
Stay outside too long, let the dog wander, and turn potty time into a sniff-and-stroll.
What Dogs Learn
“If I potty, the fun ends… so maybe I’ll hold it until we’re back inside.”
What Actually Works
Potty first. Freedom second. Every single time.
The pattern matters. If the dog learns that potty ends the outing, don’t be shocked when the dog starts delaying the potty part.
Quick truth: dogs do not automatically know your bathroom rules. In their factory settings, they mostly just prefer not to go where they sleep or eat. The rest of your home? That is your job to teach.
The goal of this page is simple: stop improvising, stop guessing, and build a system the dog can actually understand.
Module 2

The Exceptional Canines 3 / 10 IOU Method

You don’t improvise potty training. You design it.

The Core Setup

Pick One Door

Use it every time. When you arrive at the door, ask for a Sit, mark with “Yes,” and reward.

Pick One Spot

Go to the same spot every time. No wandering. This is elimination only.

Pick One Door Phrase

Approach the door, ask for a Sit, Yes + Treat, then say your phrase three times in a happy, upbeat tone. High energy. Positive. You walk out first — always. The dog is on a leash. Structure leads.

Pick One Go Phrase

Once you arrive at the designated spot, and only then, say your go phrase once, calmly, to cue elimination. (Hurry Up in a Monotone)

Feed on a Schedule

Control input/output. No Free Watering. No Free Feeding. Predictability equals reliability.

Engineer Smart Confinement

Crate, leash, or direct supervision. Reduce mistakes. Every accident rehearsed strengthens the wrong habit.

Calm before threshold matters.
Jackpot Sequence

If they eliminate: wait until the last drop of pee or poop. Then activate.

Repeat your go phrase three times in an excited tone: hurry up, hurry up, hurry up.

Deliver the jackpot — 6–7 high-value treats, one at a time, like coins from a slot machine.

Let them finish each piece before giving the next. Make it matter.

Then document when they go and when they don’t so you can see the patterns clearly.

When to Take Your Dog or Puppy Out
  • Immediately after waking (crate or nap)
  • After every meal
  • After drinking
  • After 15–20 minutes of play
  • After excitement (guests, zoomies)
  • Before bed
  • Every 1 hour (young puppies)
  • Every 2–3 hours (older puppies & adults)
IOU — Under Direct Supervision

I – In a Crate
O – On a Leash
U – Under Your Direct Supervision

never out of your sight and usually on a leash again or attached to you like an umbilical cord. Think fanny pack, leash with a carabiner, or a runner’s leash.

PDF CHEAT SHEET

The Blueprint 3/10/IOU METHOD

PDF CHART

Door Phrase/Go Phrase/Hurry up 3x!
Module 3

Daily IOU Potty & Fuel Log

This is where the pattern stops being emotional and starts becoming measurable.

What You Track
Food, water, pee, poop, accidents, jackpots, and when they did not go.
Why It Matters
This is how you determine transit time, accident windows, and where management broke down.
Use this daily. Send screenshots or weekly pages. No log = guessing. Guessing = slower progress.
Time Pee Poop Jackpot Outside or Food Water Volume Accident Y/N Notes
 
 
 
 
 
 
Module 4

Daily Totals + Weekly Pattern & Trust Review

This is where the data starts talking back to you.

Daily Totals
Total Pee: _______
Total Poop: ________
Stool Quality (1–5): ________
Food Given (Daily Amount): ________
Treats Given Per Day: ______
Water Given (Daily Amount): ________
Accidents: _______
IOU Compliance: ☐ 100%    ☐ Minor Slip    ☐ System Breakdown?
What happened? Write it below.
_________________________________________________
Weekly Pattern & Trust Review
Most common potty times: __________________________
Most common accident window: __________________________
Did accidents follow meals? ☐ Yes ☐ No
Did accidents follow play/excitement? ☐ Yes ☐ No
Was IOU followed consistently? ☐ Yes ☐ No
Where did management break down? __________________________
Trust Meter
Week 1 ☐ Restricted
Week 2 ☐ Controlled
Week 3 ☐ Expanding Freedom
Room access added: How long _________________________________
Accident free? ☐ Yes ☐ No
Module 4

Running This In Real Life

This is where the system gets run in your actual house, with your actual dog, in real life. Not theory. Not guesswork.

When to Take Your Dog or Puppy Out
  • Immediately after waking (crate or nap)
  • After every meal
  • After drinking
  • After 15–20 minutes of play
  • After excitement (guests, zoomies)
  • Before bed
  • Every 1 hour (young puppies)
  • Every 2–3 hours (older puppies & adults)
How I Want You to Use the Log

Daily

Track food, water, potty trips, accidents, and notes every day.

Weekly

Review the weekly pattern page and trust review so you can actually see what is happening.

Accountability

Send me your completed logs weekly through the contact page so I can help tighten the plan.

No log = guessing. Guessing = slower progress.
Module 5

Housebreaking Field Manual

This is the practical part. Not theory. Not fluff. Not “just be consistent” and hope for the best.

This is the real-life section — the part where you stop guessing, stop accidentally teaching the wrong thing, and start helping your dog understand the rules of your home.

Housebreaking is not automatic. It is a step-by-step process that you, the owner, must run. Done right, it can happen pretty quickly. Done wrong, your puppy can grow into an adult dog with a housebreaking problem that never should have happened in the first place.
Dogs don’t care where they go to the bathroom. We do. Humans use their eyes to find a bathroom. Dogs use their nose. That’s why this has to be taught clearly, repeated consistently, and managed correctly until the habit is solid.
A dog should not be considered reliably housebroken until he has gone at least six straight weeks with zero accidents in the house.
Clean Accidents Properly

If your puppy has an accident and you do a lazy cleanup, congratulations — you just left a scented invitation to do it again.

My preferred method is the stand and blot method:

  • Place a wad of paper towels over the accident
  • Stand on them for about 30 seconds
  • Throw those away
  • Apply an enzymatic cleaner
  • Let it soak in for at least 5 minutes
  • Blot up the excess moisture again

For solid waste, pick it up and thoroughly scrub the area with the cleaner.

And yes — the right enzymatic cleaners are in my Amazon store under potty training tools at the bottom of the page.

Do not shortcut this. If the smell is still there, your dog’s nose knows it — even if your nose is out here acting confident.
Avoid Potty Pads and Paper Training

Avoid paper training. Avoid potty pads. Avoid all the cute little indoor “solutions” that accidentally teach the exact opposite of what you want.

Paper training means teaching your dog to eliminate on something inside your house. That directly conflicts with housebreaking.

The goal of housebreaking is to teach your dog: inside is never the bathroom.

Not sometimes. Not only on rainy days. Not unless the pad is there.

Inside must not become the backup plan.

Use the “Hurry Up” Cue and Jackpot

I teach the command phrase “Hurry Up.”

Why? Because you want a phrase you can actually use in public without sounding ridiculous, and you want your dog to learn to eliminate on cue when you’re away from home.

When your dog is outside and actually eliminating, stay quiet. Don’t stare at him like you’re waiting for a stock report. Just stay calm, stay neutral, and let him finish.

Then — after the last drop of pee or poop — that’s when the party starts.

That’s when I say:

“Hurry up, hurry up, hurry up!”

And then I start paying like a Las Vegas slot machine.

One high-value treat at a time. One coin at a time.

He takes one? Yes.
He takes the next one? Yes.
Next one? Yes.

This is not: “good boy… one sad Cheerio… let’s go.” This is: Outside pays. Big.
Confine Smartly: IOU and the Umbilical Cord Method

You need to confine your dog to a small area when he is not directly working with you.

My first choice is usually a crate.

If your dog is not crate trained, or truly hates the crate, then the next best option is a kitchen with baby gates, a playpen, or what I jokingly call a little doggy RV.

That means a safe fenced-in area with a kennel or resting area, a chew toy, some water, and ideally a bit of grass or turf so they have an appropriate potty surface.

When your dog is not in the crate, I use the IOU method:

I = In a Crate
O = On a Leash
U = Under Your Direct Supervision

And when I say direct supervision, I mean direct. Not “I was kind of nearby.” Not “I was in the kitchen and he was in the living room and I was spiritually aware of him.”

One of the easiest ways to do this is the umbilical cord method.

Clip the leash to a fanny pack, a carabiner, a runner’s leash, or something attached to your body. That keeps your hands free and keeps your dog connected to you.

A dog that is not yet housebroken does not get an all-access backstage pass to your home.
Learn the Timing and the Signals

Your job is to learn when your dog needs to go.

  • immediately after waking up
  • about 10 minutes after drinking a moderate amount of water
  • within about 20 minutes of eating
  • after play
  • after excitement
  • after recall work
  • before bed
  • about once an hour when young

Your dog will also try to communicate through body language.

  • sudden sniffing
  • frantic circling
  • pacing
  • stopping play
  • moving toward the door
Manage the Day, the Crate, and Freedom

If you work during the day, get help. Ask a neighbor. Ask a friend. Hire somebody.

If a young puppy is forced to stay in a very small area too long with no chance to eliminate, that works against housebreaking.

If your puppy is soiling the crate, make sure he is empty before going in, take him out more often, and for some dogs, remove the bedding.

As a general rule, the maximum advisable time for a young puppy to be crated during the day is one hour for every month of age, up to around four hours.

Freedom inside the home is earned. He should not be allowed to visit other rooms until he has gone at least two full weeks with no accidents.

Then you can open the house gradually: one adjacent room at a time, every two weeks of success.

If he has an accident, go back. Minimal access again. Start over.
Never, Never, Never
  • never rub your dog’s nose in an accident
  • never scold after the fact
  • never hit or punish your dog
A dog that is not yet housebroken must never be loose in your house without you directly watching him.

If you cannot watch him, put him in a crate. If the crate is not an option yet, use your doggy RV setup, playpen, gated kitchen, leash attachment, or some other form of real management.

Module 6

Facts, Myths, FAQ & Real-Life Fixes

This is the part where we clear up the nonsense, tighten the weak spots, and fix the things that quietly throw people off track.

Most people do not have a bad dog. They have mixed messages, loose timing, or advice that sounded smart and absolutely wasn’t.

Why People Get Stuck Here

Almost always it comes down to the same three things.

Structure gets loose. Timing drifts. Supervision fades.

Then people get frustrated, the dog gets blamed, and now everybody is acting like the flooring is cursed.

This works when the system is tight. Not when it is sort of happening, mostly, kind of, depending on the day.

Bells — Do We Add Them or Make This Harder?

Let’s talk about the bell on the door.

Sounds like a great idea, right? Cute. Clever. Instagram loves it.

Real life? Not so much.

Effective housebreaking uses supervision, consistency, scheduling, and confinement — not teaching the dog to run the exit button.

Bells sound smart until you realize the dog is now in charge of requesting access, and you have to answer every single time.

Dog rings. You’re busy. You miss it. Dog waits… then goes, “Well, I guess the hallway it is.”

And dogs do not just learn “bell = bathroom.”

They usually learn: bell = door opens
  • ring to go potty
  • ring to go play
  • ring to bark at something
  • ring because bored
  • ring because… why not
Congratulations — you didn’t build a potty signal. You built a customer service hotline.

I care more about one door, one spot, one rhythm, one cue, and one payoff than I do about turning your hallway into a science project.

Can We Guarantee Results?

No honest trainer guarantees behavior.

Dogs live with humans, not robots.

What we can do is dramatically improve results when structure, timing, supervision, and consistency are actually followed.

So no, I’m not selling magic. I’m selling a system that works when people actually run it.

Pee — Submissive / Excitement Pee

This is not the same thing as ordinary housebreaking failure.

This is emotional.

The fix is not more pressure. The fix is calmer greetings, less intensity, less hype, and better emotional control.

Less “OH MY GOSH HI BABY!” More calm structure.

Help Me — My Dog Is Marking

Marking is not revenge. It is not your dog being spiteful. And it is not your dog trying to run a criminal empire in your hallway.

It is usually:

habit opportunity stress territory or a breakdown in management

Belly bands and diapers can help manage it in some cases — but they do not fix it.

Structure fixes it. Supervision fixes it. Clean reps fix it.
Pro Tips That Actually Move the Needle

Let’s keep this simple.

Same door Same spot Same cue Same timing Same reward

That’s the system.

Not “try something new every day.” Not “let’s see what works.” Not “my neighbor said to put a bell on the pantry and whisper affirmations.”

Consistency beats creativity in housebreaking.

Track everything. Patterns don’t lie. Guessing does.

If it’s not improving, the system is loose somewhere.
The 7 Biggest Mistakes Dog Owners Make

Let’s be honest: most dog problems do not show up out of nowhere like a weather event.

A lot of them are human-made. Not because people are bad. Not because they do not care. Mostly because nobody explained the rules clearly, early enough, or in plain English.

Read these with an open mind. A little humility here will save you a whole lot of money, stress, and shredded furniture.

Mistake #1: Getting a dog when you do not really have time for a dog

A dog is not a goldfish. A dog is not a houseplant with eyeballs. And a dog is definitely not a furry side project you check in on when your schedule clears up.

Dogs need time. Training takes time. Potty training takes time. Exercise takes time. Play takes time. Relationship takes time.

If you do not have time for one dog, getting one anyway and hoping the dog raises itself is how behavior problems get built.

Mistake #2: Choosing the wrong dog for your actual lifestyle

A lot of people pick dogs based on looks, emotion, or some fantasy version of their future self. Then they bring home a dog built for ten miles of movement and problem-solving and expect it to thrive living like a decorative throw pillow.

Pick the wrong dog for your lifestyle, and now you are not training a dog — you are managing a mismatch.

Mistake #3: Getting two puppies at the same time

Sometimes this sounds adorable. Sometimes people think they’re saving time. Usually it does the opposite.

Two puppies often bond harder to each other than to the humans, which can make focus, socialization, housebreaking, and training slower and messier.

Mistake #4: Using fear, force, or old-school nonsense

Hitting the dog? Wrong. Rubbing the dog’s nose in a potty accident? Wrong. Yelling all the time? Wrong. Flipping the dog over to “show dominance”? Also wrong.

Fear does not build trust. Force does not create understanding. A well-trained dog does not need a louder human. A well-trained dog needs a clearer human.

Mistake #5: Confusing the housebreaking process

People stay outside too long. Let the dog wander. Use potty pads. Don’t track anything. Give too much freedom too early. Punish after the fact. And then wonder why the dog seems confused.

Inside cannot be one big maybe. Inside has to become clearly not the bathroom.

Mistake #6: Getting another dog to fix the first dog

This one sounds sweet. It is often not smart.

A second dog does not replace human leadership, structure, and follow-through. It often just doubles whatever is already shaky.

Mistake #7: Taking puppies away too early

Puppies learn a lot from the litter: bite inhibition, frustration tolerance, den cleanliness, social feedback, and dog-to-dog life skills.

Pulling a puppy too early can set the stage for problems later. That does not mean the dog is doomed. It does mean you may have more developmental gaps to fill.
Cleaner choices. Better structure. Less drama. More follow-through. That is how you build a dog that fits your life instead of one that keeps running your life like a furry crisis manager.
Final Overview

How This Actually Works When You Keep It Simple

Potty training gets messy when humans improvise. It gets clean when the system stays boring, predictable, and repeatable.

The Whole Game

  • one door
  • one spot
  • one door phrase
  • one go phrase
  • same timing
  • same payoff
  • same structure every day

What Usually Breaks It

  • too much freedom too early
  • inconsistent timing
  • weak rewards
  • not tracking
  • waiting too long between potty trips
  • getting emotional instead of tightening the plan
Reality Check: your dog is not being stubborn. If accidents are still happening, the plan needs tightening.

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