Grooming Guides

Dog Grooming Tips for Beginners: Your First 90 Days as a Professional Groomer

Essential dog grooming tips for new professional groomers — tools, techniques, client communication, and how to build a full schedule fast.

Dog Grooming Tips for Beginners: Your First 90 Days as a Professional Groomer

Every experienced groomer remembers the feeling: you've finished school, bought your shears, and your first client is walking in the door. You know the theory. You've practiced on model dogs. But nothing fully prepares you for the reality of professional grooming until you're in it — every day, with real dogs, real owners, and real time pressure.

This guide compresses what it takes most new groomers 2–3 years to learn by trial and error. Consider it the orientation guide for your first 90 days.


The Mindset Shift: From Hobbyist to Professional

The biggest adjustment new groomers make isn't technical — it's mental. Being a professional groomer means:


Month 1: Foundation

Master These Before Anything Else

The bath. Thorough, coat-penetrating baths that clean down to the skin — not a quick surface rinse. Proper dilution ratios for concentrated shampoos. Methodical coverage so you never miss spots. How to handle dogs that hate water.

The blow-dry. Drying is where most beginners lose time. A fully dried coat — especially on curly breeds — is the foundation for accurate scissor work. Learn velocity dryer technique: angling airflow correctly, moving efficiently through the coat without tangling, and knowing when the coat is actually dry versus feeling dry on the surface.

Nail trimming. This is the skill beginners fear most, and the fear is understandable — quicking a dog is painful for the animal and stressful for you. Learn the anatomy first. Practice on desensitized, cooperative dogs before working on anxious ones. Develop a consistent grip. Learn styptic powder protocol for when you nick a quick (it will happen — to every groomer).

Ear cleaning basics. Every groom should include a basic ear cleaning: visual check, gentle cleaning with ear solution, wipe-down of the canal with a cotton ball. For breeds like poodles with hair growth inside the ear canal, learn the pluck vs. trim debate and how to advise owners.

Equipment to Know Cold

You should be able to use the following without thinking:

| Tool | What to Know | |------|-------------| | Slicker brush | Angle, pressure, how to avoid brush burn | | Greyhound comb | How to use it as your final mat detector | | Dematting rake | When to use vs. when to recommend shave-down | | Clipper + blades | Blade numbering system, how heat and pressure affect performance | | Snap-on comb guards | Size correspondence, even coverage technique | | Straight shears | Grip, position relative to body, scissoring in sections | | Curved shears | When to use vs. straight, blending applications | | Thinning shears | Blending harsh lines, coat softening | | High-velocity dryer | Safe distance, angle, technique |

Don't buy the cheapest tools. This is one of the few places in early career grooming where spending more upfront saves money. Cheap clippers overheat, cheap blades dull fast, and cheap shears won't hold an edge. You don't need the top-of-the-line everything — but you need professional-grade basics. Budget $800–$1,500 for a solid beginner kit.

The Blade Numbering System (Essential)

New groomers often struggle with blade numbers. Here's the simple version:

Higher blade number = shorter cut. A #10 blade leaves 1/16" of hair. A #7 leaves 1/8". A #5 leaves 1/4". A #4 leaves 3/8". This feels backwards at first but becomes automatic quickly.

Blade direction matters. With the grain (in the direction fur grows) = slightly longer result. Against the grain = shorter. A #7 against the grain cuts close to a #10 with the grain.

Common beginner blade choices:

Prioritize Safety Over Speed

This is non-negotiable in month one. Common beginner safety errors:


Month 2: Building Breed Knowledge

By month two, you should be comfortable with the basics on easy dogs (short-coated Labs, Goldens, Beagles). Now it's time to develop breed knowledge systematically.

Priority Breeds to Learn (by demand)

Tier 1 — Learn immediately (extremely high client demand):

Tier 2 — Learn in months 2–3:

For each breed, know:

The Doodle Reality

If you're entering the profession in 2026, a large percentage of your clients will be doodle owners. Here's what you need to know:

Doodles (goldendoodles, labradoodles, bernedoodles, aussiedoodles, etc.) are grooming-intensive dogs with variable coat types. The same "breed" (not really a breed — a cross) can produce dogs with tight poodle curls, loose waves, or nearly straight hair depending on genetics.

The most common doodle issue: matting. Doodle owners are frequently not told at purchase how much coat maintenance is required. Many come in for their first professional groom at 6–12 months with a severely matted coat. Learn the dematting conversation:

Document coat condition at every appointment. Photo evidence of matting before and after protects you from owner complaints and helps you track improvement over time.

Learning Breed Standards vs. Pet Trims

Show grooming and everyday pet grooming are different disciplines. You don't need to learn show ring standards for every breed — you need to know what pet owners ask for and what looks good. "A puppy cut" and "a teddy bear" are not show terminology — but they're what you'll hear every day. Build a vocabulary bridge between what owners say and what they mean.

A useful practice: ask to see a photo of what the owner wants. This saves misunderstandings and gives you a reference to check against during the groom.


Month 3: Efficiency and Client Management

Getting Faster Without Getting Sloppy

Speed in grooming comes from efficient movement, not rushing. The difference:

Rushing = skipping steps, accepting uneven results, making safety shortcuts Efficiency = reducing wasted movement, developing muscle memory, working in a logical sequence

Work on efficiency by analyzing your own workflow. Where do you back-track? Where do you spend time repositioning unnecessarily? Where does your blow-dry add time because the bath wasn't thorough enough? Efficiency gains come from fixing upstream problems.

A useful self-exercise: note what time you start each section of the groom (bath, blow-dry, clipper work, finish) for one week. You'll quickly see where your time goes and where improvement opportunities are.

Managing Difficult Dogs

Every new groomer has a threshold moment with an anxious, reactive, or aggressive dog. This is normal. How you respond matters:

Prevention first. Ask the owner before the appointment: "Is there anything we should know about your dog's grooming experience? Any sensitive areas? Any history of anxiety?" Document the answers. A dog with known needle-sensitivity or a history of snapping on nail trims should not surprise you.

Know your limits. You are not obligated to groom a dog that is a danger to you or to itself. If a dog is severely reactive, explain to the owner that sedation grooming (through their vet) may be the best path, and that continuing to force-groom an extremely anxious dog makes their anxiety worse over time, not better.

Safety first, always. A bite incident is dangerous for you, stressful for the dog, and can create serious liability. Do not let pride push you through a groom that has become unsafe.

Desensitization basics. For mildly anxious dogs, short positive interactions help. Let them sniff your tools. Take breaks. Reward calm behavior. Keep sessions shorter with more frequent grooms until they acclimate. This is a selling point you can communicate to owners — "Let's do a few shorter orientation grooms while we help your puppy get comfortable with the process."

Client Communication: The Consultation and Handoff

Before the groom: A 2–3 minute consultation with the owner at drop-off. Confirm the style, ask about any coat issues, mention the approximate time for pickup. This sets expectations and prevents surprise complaints.

During the groom: If you discover matting, coat issues, or anything that changes the quoted service, call the owner before proceeding. Never do more or less than agreed without communication.

At pickup: Show the owner the finished dog, describe what you did, and note anything relevant (ear infection signs, a small cut you found under the mat, a skin issue worth mentioning to their vet). Ending with proactive communication — "I noticed her ear looked a little red, worth having the vet take a look" — builds trust even when it's not glamorous.

The rebooking conversation: End every appointment with a suggested rebooking. "Your goldendoodle's coat grows fast — I'd suggest booking again in 6 weeks. Want me to schedule that now?" Clients who rebook at the appointment are far more likely to keep their schedule than those who say "I'll call you when I need it."


The Business Side: Getting Set Up Properly from Day One

Even if you're working for someone else, understanding the business side helps you think about your eventual independence.

Track Your Groom Times

Keep a log of groom times by breed and size for your first 6 months. This becomes your pricing reference when you set your own rates. You'll quickly learn that a matted goldendoodle that takes 3 hours should not be priced the same as a well-maintained one that takes 90 minutes.

Learn How Business Software Works

Whether you're an employee or planning to start your own business, understanding scheduling software and client management makes you more valuable and more prepared. Purpose-built grooming software tracks:

When you're ready to go independent, this foundation means you're not starting from scratch on the business side. For more on how to structure client records that serve you long-term, see our dog grooming client records guide.

Understand Grooming Industry Pricing

Knowing what your local market charges for different breeds and services helps you evaluate whether an employer is paying you fairly (if employed) or helps you set your own rates correctly (if independent). Our dog grooming prices by breed guide is a useful market reference.


The Most Important 90-Day Habit: Ask for Feedback

The fastest path to improvement in your first 90 days is structured feedback. Specifically:


Related Reading


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