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Preparation Isn’t Extra, It’s Strategy

September 05, 20257 min read

Preparation Isn’t Extra, It’s Strategy

Great searches don’t happen by accident. They are built on preparation, on strategy, and on asking the right questions. Too often, dog training leans on old habits or “folklore.” People say, “just follow your gut.” But science shows us something different. Real clarity comes from testing ideas, asking better questions, and then training the dog with purpose.

The ThinkTank and the Strategy Thread

At Dog Merickel (DogMerickel.com) we run a weekly online ThinkTank called The Society For Dogs. It’s made up of gifted scientists and Handlers who want to rise to excellence and mastery. We meet to tackle big topics that move us forward.

This week’s ThinkTank focused on Search Strategy. Strategy is the bridge between drills and real missions. It’s not about writing a neat plan and hoping your dog follows it. It’s about reading the terrain in real time. It’s about knowing how odor travels, how it hides, and how dogs notice every shift in wind, light, and scent. Strategy is live, urgent, and real.

When strategy is solid, setbacks become data instead of drama. Wins become proof instead of luck. Confidence isn’t born in the field. It’s built ahead of time, in the thinking that shapes the search.

Leadership Beyond the Leash

Good strategy also needs good leadership. Not the loud, pushy kind, but the kind dogs feel in their bones — calm, consistent, and clear.

Daniel Pink, in his book Drive, explains that true motivation doesn’t come from bribes or pressure. It comes from autonomy, mastery, and purpose. The same is true for us and for our dogs. When a Handler shows up with clarity and focus, the dog can trust and follow.

That’s why reading matters. Books like Drive help Handlers build an inner compass. They give us words for the things we feel but struggle to explain. Leadership isn’t a title. It’s a practice. It shows up in how we train, reflect, and guide our dogs.

Arthur Brooks, writing in The Atlantic and in his Happiness column, has shown that resilience doesn’t come from chasing joy. It comes from helping others. Research proves that generosity, kindness, and connection improve well-being more than self-centered habits do. That truth matters in the dog world, which can sometimes feel competitive or unkind. Choosing to share and support isn’t weakness. It’s strength.

Let Boredom Be Your Secret Weapon

Most people think boredom is bad. Our culture tells us to avoid it, scroll it away, or cover it with busyness. But boredom can be one of the Handler’s best tools.

Arthur C. Brooks, writing just last week in the Harvard Business Review (August 28, 2025), argued that boredom is not a flaw to escape but a skill to practice. When we let ourselves be bored, our brains switch into the “default mode network,” the system that sparks creativity and deeper thought. Brooks says we should leave space for boredom, because it helps us ask bigger questions about purpose and direction.

This isn’t just for executives or office workers. It matters for Handlers too. Dogs thrive when we are calm and unhurried. A quiet walk after training, a phone-free coffee in the morning, or sitting while your dog explores a creek — these are not wasted moments. They are practices that create clarity.

Rituals That Shift Everything

Preparation doesn’t only live in calendars or training logs. It lives in daily rituals. These small but steady practices can change everything.

The Progress Ritual
Daniel Pink, in Drive, explains that progress in meaningful work is one of the strongest motivators. But most of us live in “feedback deserts,” where we don’t get clear signs that we’re moving forward.

That’s where the Progress Ritual comes in. At the end of each day, write down three things you accomplished. In training, it might be your dog ignoring a distraction, handling the leash better, or noticing one new insight about your team. In life, it could be an act of courage, something you learned, or one kind word you gave. Small wins build momentum. They remind us that we are not stuck in place — we’re moving ahead.

The Boredom Ritual
Make space for quiet. Take your dog on a relaxed walk with no targets. Leave your phone behind. Let your dog sniff and splash. Let your thoughts wander. Clarity shows up when the noise fades.

The One Line a Day Practice
Daniel Pink also suggests ending each day by writing down a single thought, a line from something you read, and a question. Over time, this builds a personal record of growth. Handlers who practice it often notice patterns in their training and in themselves.

The Kindness Effect
Kindness is not just “feel-good fluff.” A study published August 28, 2025 in Emotion by Naclerio, Lazar, Hornstein, and Eisenberger tested it directly. In a two-week program, people were asked to do three acts of kindness each week. Those who focused on others showed big drops in depression, anxiety, and loneliness compared to the control group. The driver was clear: connection.

Adam Grant, Wharton professor and bestselling author, pointed to this study and reminded us that just three acts of kindness a week can make a real difference. His latest book, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things (October 2023), makes a bigger point: excellence isn’t about raw talent. It’s about systems, habits, and support. Kindness is one of those habits that multiplies potential.

For Handlers, the practice is simple. Encourage someone after a tough session. Offer honest feedback in our Hub. Volunteer for a community demo with your dog. These aren’t extras. They are part of how we build stamina, perspective, and trust. In detection work, kindness keeps us steady when the work gets hard.

Why Community Matters

The rituals matter. The science matters. But what makes them powerful is practicing them in Community.

That is the heartbeat of The Society For Dogs. Every week in our ThinkTank we put the science, the leadership, and the rituals to work together. One week it might be a deep dive into course design. Another week it might be our Is It or Isn’t It video game, where members share clips of their dogs and we analyze whether the dog is truly in odor or just curious. Honest critique, shared curiosity, and evidence-driven practice push us all forward.

It’s not about ego. It’s about synergy. In the ThinkTank, no one pretends to know it all. We show up with questions, test them against science, and trust our dogs. That mix of rigor and generosity is how Handlers rise to mastery.

Hope in Motion: OdorQuest

And if you’re reading this thinking, “I want that kind of clarity and connection,” we built a place for you too. It’s called OdorQuest — not a school, but a journey. It’s our online hub for Handlers who want to rise, who want the joy of collaboration, and who want to learn in synergy with others. Inside OdorQuest, you’ll find structure without rigidity, science without ego, and a team that believes progress is better together. It’s hope in motion — a place where you and your dog can sharpen your craft alongside others on the same path.

Closing Reflection

When was the last time you sat with your dog in stillness? No agenda. No distractions. No expectations. Just space.

That quiet breath is where questions form. It’s where strategy begins. It’s where preparation turns into clarity.

This isn’t marketing. This is method. This is how teams are built. This is how Handlers grow. This is how clarity shows up in the field. And this is why we prepare — not because it’s extra, but because preparation is the strategy.

Sources & Further Reading

Want to dig deeper into the science behind this week’s blog? Here are a few places to start:

  • Arthur C. Brooks, Harvard Business Review You Need to Be Bored — Here’s Why (Aug 28, 2025). Brooks makes the case that boredom is not a flaw but a skill, opening the door to creativity and meaning.

  • Arthur C. Brooks, The Atlantic How to Build a Life. His ongoing column on happiness highlights how generosity and prosocial behavior fuel resilience better than chasing joy.

  • Daniel H. Pink, DriveDaniel Pink's Drive Pink explains why autonomy, mastery, and purpose matter more than external rewards. Essential reading for anyone leading a dog team (or any team at all).

  • Naclerio, Lazar, Hornstein, & Eisenberger, Emotion “A little kindness goes a long way”. A 2025 study showing that just three acts of kindness per week significantly reduced depression, anxiety, and loneliness.

  • Adam Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things Adam Grant's Hidden Potential. Grant reminds us that excellence isn’t about raw talent, but about systems, habits, and community — exactly the kind of growth we chase in detection dog work.

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Frequently Asked Questions

GENERAL QUESTIONS

What is Dog Merickel?

Dog Merickel is a science-driven platform dedicated to advancing detection dog training through expert guidance, innovative tools, and a strong Community of Handlers.

Who is Dog Merickel for?

We support detection dog Handlers at all levels—whether you’re just starting out or refining advanced skills in Human Remains Detection (HRD) or Archaeology Human Remains Detection (AHRD).

What makes Dog Merickel different?

We combine cutting-edge science, structured training strategies, and a supportive online Community to ensure you and your dog reach the highest level of success.

The Society For Dogs

What is The Society For Dogs?

The Society For Dogs is our exclusive membership-based Community where Handlers can connect, learn, and grow together. We host weekly Coffee Chats, provide structured training discussions, and offer expert insights.

How do I join The Society For Dogs?

You can become a member by signing up on our website. Elite Memberships are currently $25 per month, but the price will increase soon!

What do I get as a member?

Access to our private online Community

Weekly live training discussions via Zoom

Structured training support and expert insights

Exclusive training resources and tools

Training and Courses

What is OdorQuest?

OdorQuest is our structured training program designed to take Handlers through progressive, science-backed detection training, helping teams build strong skills from foundational to advanced levels.

Can I buy training plans without joining The Society For Dogs?

Yes! We offer one-time training plans like Odor Origins that you can purchase individually. However, joining The Society gives you ongoing support, deeper insights, and access to live discussions.

Business & Logistics

Is Dog Merickel a nonprofit?

We are in the process of setting up a 501(c)(3) nonprofit called the Detection Dog Foundation, which will serve as the fundraising arm for scholarships and educational opportunities.

Do you offer in-person training?

We don’t provide hands-on field training, but we do guide Handlers in preparing for it. We also share insights on where to find the best field trainers and workshops.

Can I teach a course through Dog Merickel?

Yes! Our upcoming OdorQuest Academy will allow experienced Handlers to create and teach virtual classes, earning revenue while contributing to the growth of the detection dog Community.

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Got questions? Fired up about training? Just want to talk dogs? We’re here for it.

At Dog Merickel, we don’t do cookie-cutter solutions—we craft strategies that work for YOU and your detection dog. Whether you're curious about The Society For Dogs, need a solid training plan, or just want to chat about the latest science in detection training, we’re all ears (and so are our dogs).

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