The very best training treat is regular kibble from your puppy’s daily rations. The #1 single, the best piece of advice for any puppy or dog owner, is DON’T FEED FROM A FOOD BOWL
until you can honestly say that your dog is perfect for you. Instead, weigh out your dog’s daily ration in the morning and use each piece of kibble for classical conditioning and teaching basic manners. In the evening, soak the leftover kibble in water, stuff the moist mush into Kongs and place in the freezer for the next day — Kongsicles!
I have a list of 101 Things you may teach a puppy/dog using a single piece of kibble, for example, to love children, men, visitors, strangers, other dogs and other animals (classical conditioning) and to teach come, sit, lie down, stand, stay, roll over, heel, loose-leash-walking, hustle, steady, backup, beg, bow, Bang! (rollover-stay), fetch, find, etc., etc., etc. Kibble is also invaluable as a lure to entice puppies to chew toys and for teaching Shush on Cue.
Enhanced Kibble for Specific Uses — Occasionally you need a higher value treat, for example, for children to use when handling, training and playing with your puppy, as a reward for Eliminating on Cue (six sequential enhanced treats), and during the first few training sessions when teaching Come-when-Called or Emergency Distance Sits in the park and on walks.
For dogs, food is all about SMELL, not taste and so, place a couple of cups of kibble inside a container with just a sprinkle of freeze-dried liver powder, or crumbled cheese or bacon, secure the lid, leave for a day and now you have the same healthy kibble but it smells like Heaven, (well, actually, live liver, bacon or cheese).
Ziwi Peak and Liver Treats are the two very best kibbles to use as training treats. Both are excellent foods but it is the shape of the kibble that makes it so useful for training. Each piece of kibble is rectangular, flat and thin and so, may be broken into four or eight pieces. Classically conditioning dogs to like people and other dogs and progressively desensitizing handling routines requires at least a hundred food rewards per training session. Most kibble is too large, but for example, just 13 pieces of Ziwi may be broken (or cut) into 104 smelly food rewards.
I prefer to use kibble as training treats rather than cheese, salami, hot dogs, peanut butter, or commercial teats because it is easier to calculate the puppy/dog’s daily calorie intake.
For more training ideas be sure to read Ten Quick Dog Training Tips: https://www.naplestopdogs.com/ten-quick-dog-training-tips