It takes years to understand dogs. Years. You call yourself a "master dog trainer" when you've only been doing this for a year? Sorry. Don't buy it.
Look up the word, "ontogenesis". It means an organisms development from conception to the last day of life. Along the way, the organism encounters various stimuli, both internal and external, which shape that development. Different stimuli have different effects at different stages of development. It takes time to not only study these effects but also to witness many of them with many dogs. Some of what you need to learn can come from books, but even more comes from witnessing this process, seeing what goes right and what goes wrong. Some of it can be medical, such as when a puppy has an adverse reaction to vaccines and what might result in terms of future behavior. Some of it can be experiences at crucial times that can enhance what the puppy will become as an adult. Some of it is witnessing what happens when the wrong experiences happen, or when experiences happen at the wrong time, and how that affects the resulting adult. And then there are the wide range of traumas that can happen along the way.
Then, do you know what questions you should be asking? What clues you should be looking for if you don't know the entire history? Or what recommendations should be made along the way, especially if things are going wrong?
I think humility goes a long way in the dog training world. It is OK to be a beginner. It is OK that you aren't a world expert yet. My main recommendation is to not get ahead of your knowledge and address topics and problems that you aren't ready to handle. Dog training is a career, not just a job.
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