This is a specific conversation about Puppy training — the right tools from the start — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Working from home with a new puppy sounds lovely — and honestly, the timing is great for a 9-week-old. The first few months genuinely set the patterns for life, and being home gives you more opportunities to catch good behaviour in the moment, which is exactly when training lands. The right tools make that easier and less stressful for both of you; the wrong ones can accidentally reinforce habits that become a real headache later. So tell me — what breed is the pup, how old are they, and what are you mainly trying to work on right now?
She's a 9-week-old Corgi. I work from home so I need things to be relatively quiet — no loud buzzers or anything. Mainly trying to get her to come when called and sit on command, just the basics.
inparticular.ai
Perfect age to start — Corgis are sharp and pick things up fast, which is both the good news and the reason it matters to start right. Before I point you toward anything, a quick question: have you done any clicker training before, or is this your first go at it? I ask because it changes which version of a tool will actually suit you.
No, never used a clicker. Complete beginner with training.
inparticular.ai
Brilliant — that's the ideal starting point, actually. My recommendation is the Mighty Paw Soft Clicker. It's a button-style clicker with a softer, muted click rather than the sharp metallic snap you get from cheaper ones, which matters a lot when you're on a call or just don't want a jarring noise every few minutes. For a Corgi at 9 weeks, clicker training is genuinely one of the most effective methods — you mark the exact moment she does the right thing, pair it with a small treat, and she starts connecting her actions to rewards very quickly. Recall and sit are both perfect starter behaviours for this. You'll see her making the association within a few short sessions. It's inexpensive, fits in your pocket, and the soft click means it won't startle her or interrupt your work calls. That's the one tool I'd start with before anything else.
That sounds really sensible. Do I need anything else alongside it, or is that enough to get going?
inparticular.ai
The clicker on its own is enough to get started — the only thing you'll need alongside it is high-value treats she actually cares about, something soft and small so you're not stopping every session to wait for her to chew. Once you've got a solid recall and a reliable sit over the next few weeks, you can think about adding a long line for practising recall at a distance, but honestly don't overcomplicate it at 9 weeks. Get the marker behaviour solid first, everything else builds on that.
Great, that's really helpful. I'll grab the Mighty Paw clicker and some small treats and get started this week.
inparticular.ai
You're in a great position — home all day, an eager young Corgi, and starting at 9 weeks means you're ahead of the curve. Keep sessions to two or three minutes at most at this age, finish on a success, and you'll be surprised how quickly she gets it. Good luck — she sounds like a great pup.