OK, so recently we caused quite a stir by offering reduced adoption rates for Halloween. So far we have done this for every holiday or any event we can think of. You see the same marketing ploy in stores across the nation – every holiday or event – there are the sales. Adopting animals is actually about marketing. It is about marketing the animals we have for adoption. You can object to that and you can be outraged but it is the truth.
Let’s look at this. We can start with Petfinder. If you are looking for an animal to adopt and you are browsing through hundreds on PetFinder that meet your criteria, which do you remember?
You of course remember the one with the cutest picture (you’ll remember the one above, won’t you?) or the best write up. You don’t really note the ones that have no descriptions, boring descriptions, or a picture so blurry you can’t tell if it is a dog or a cat. What is that then when we get our friends Becky or Scott down here to do professional photos for us of all our pets for our pages? That’s marketing.
What is it when we change their name when they come to us named “Trouble” and we rename them on Petfinder to be “Snuggly”? What is it when we sit and reword their description over and over to make them more appealing than the thousands of other pets you’re looking at that week, trying to decide? That’s all marketing. Is it wrong? Hell no. I’d rather change Trouble to Snuggly and have him adopted that day then have him sit here for two years because it would be wrong to change his name. I’d rather retake a picture of “Sweetheart” from her GOOD side rather than show the side of her that has all her skin gone as she recovers from mange or abuse. Is that wrong? No. That’s marketing and to me I don’t care a wit about what anyone thinks – if that gets that dog into a good home then I’m going to use every skill I can think of and I’m going to take advantage of every ploy I can to make our animals standout and make you come down to meet them. Because that is what it is about. Getting you down here to meet them and take one home so we can save the life of another one.
So does this mean we just try to get people in the door and stick an animal in their car?
Um…no. In fact sometimes the animal you come to look at is NOT a good match for you. We will talk to you and meet you and get to know you and we’ll be right up front with you, even as you get mad at us and in our face – and we will tell you, “Hey, Sweetheart isn’t a good match for your family. She is super high energy and you people are couch potatoes and she will drive you bonkers within 24 hours, but let me show you Snuggly! He will lay right next to you on the couch and be happy to do so.” And we do that, and most people respect our opinions on it because let’s face it – YOU adopt a dog or a cat probably two or three times in your life and we do it about two or three times a DAY. So most of you respect that, and work with us, and we match you wonderfully with a pet, and as a result our return rate is far, far, far, far less than most shelters.
But we got you down here through our marketing. Our advertising. Our promotion. By putting our best faces forward. And then we got you to help us save a life and we gave you a lifelong companion to offer you unconditional love. Yet …some people still think this is “wrong”. They object to our offering “specials” for deals for any of our animals.
I challenge those people to read the book Redemption by Nathan Winograd. Excuse me for summarizing, he is much more eloquent than I, but a huge part of the problem in shelters today is that shelters put up their OWN blocks to adopting animals. They are their own worst enemy.
Let’s take one example. Not adopting out animals to families without a yard. To that I laugh. Who spends more time with their dog? The family that has a yard? Or the family that walks their pet three times a day? Which dog is more socialized? The dog that goes out three times a day and gets pet by people on the street and meets other dogs on their walks? Or the dog, isolated in a yard?
It has become a mark of PRIDE in shelters and rescues to show how RIGOROUS your adoption process is and how many checks and balances and rules and regulations you have to adoption. Why? Millions of animals die every year while you refuse homes to people without a fence. I hear so many rescues that come up to us at events or for a tour of our sanctuary and brag about how tough their application process is. I smile wanly and shake my head. Occasionally I try to explain or teach them that they are actually HURTING animals with that methodology. They rarely get it.
At Pets Alive we will even adopt to someone who wants to declaw. Oh my god!! Everyone just SHUDDERED and FREAKED out. Let me state that we are vehemently against declawing. It is a cruel practice. But there are HUNDREDS of ALREADY declawed cats in the shelter system. If we have an application for a cat that is wonderful but they want to declaw, we first call them and explain about declawing. We refer them to websites that explain the gruesome process, we try to convince them that this is cruel and inhumane, but some of them have “reasons” and won’t be swayed. We disagree, but other than that this home is absolutely WONDERFUL for a cat. Do we deny them? No. We don’t…but we’ll only place an ALREADY declawed cat with them. I think that is win-win. A cat got a wonderful home, opening up a slot for us to save another and another cat got saved from being declawed. Because let’s face it, our rejection of this home won’t stop them from just going elsewhere and getting another cat and declawing it,or lying on their next application somewhere. Win-win people. It is about doing no harm and about saving lives. And THAT is what our primary purpose is. Not about judging this woman and being disgusted and so not giving her a cat. It is about educating her and if that fails then still finding a solution where no one is harmed and a life is still saved. That cat that we have in our shelter that is already declawed needs a home too, after all.
OK, so we have talked a little about rigorous adoption processes that block animals from finding homes and we’ve discussed how marketing can help save lives, now for the final subject. Reduced adoption rates. Recently I put up some of our all time favorite dogs on our website. All have been with us for YEARS. Yes. YEARS. I promoted them on our website – all dressed up in costume (that is MARKETING!! – you REMEMBER these dogs) and advertised them for an adoption fee of just $25. ::SHOCK:: some of you just passed out. HOW CAN WE ADVERTISE OUR DOGS OR CATS FOR SUCH A LOW PRICE. We just want to”get them out?” We care “less about them” than our other dogs?
Actually no. One of those dogs is my all time favorite dog. Favorite. As in when he leaves I will weep my heart out and the people that take him home will leave me damaged and empty while at the same time I will rejoice and think every day that he is finally where he belongs – being loved in a home. So how can anyone accuse me of loving him LESS? No. Indeed I love him more to be willing to sacrifice the adoption fees that keep us alive and help cover our costs, in order to see him happy and in a good home.
When I first heard of reducing adoption fees, two or three years ago at a seminar, I was aghast. I said NO. Those dogs or cats are NO LESS worth a full fee than any dog or cat at the sanctuary. Just because they are harder to place or have issues does NOT make them any less worthy or valuable than any other animal there. And I rejected that option. I also feared that we would get the “riff-raff”. The “element”. People coming JUST because the animal was cheap. It took me a few years and a number of animal conferences and seminars and speaking with some of the best people in the business to realize I was wrong.
It isn’t about the adoption fee. Indeed every person that has ever come to adopt during a “special” has wound up making an additional donation on top of the reduced fee. I think it was Bonnie Brown that finally convinced me. I spoke to her personally and I said “But you’re going to get tons of people that are just “trash types” to come and adopt and then they won’t have the income to care for the animal if it gets sick or needs care or anything like that.” She smiled at me and said that in their experience (and she is adopting out thousands and thousands of animals a year, far more than we do) the quality of applicants did NOT go down with the adoption fee. She further asked me if I trusted my adoption team. I was filled with pride as I told her we had the best team out there. So why then, she said would you think they would give away one of your animals to any applicant that was less than worthy of the animal?
Wow.
She is right.
So by advertising my heart-and-soul (Cam) for $25 was not lowering his worth. Promoting him for that price might make people spread the word more – let it go viral. Take his costumed picture and spread it all over the web. And then maybe, just maybe, this very special boy would find someone that looked at him and said “That’s my dog”. Would Erica, or Kerri, or Sue, or Meg, let Cam go to a family that wasn’t good enough for him, or that was just there for $25? No, because that person has to pass the same adoption process. We don’t lessen the application with the price. They still have to have great references and a good vet history for their current or past pets and they still need to meet us and we still get to know them and we still talk to them and see how they interact with our cats and dogs. So why would I think, or YOU think, that the reduced adoption fees mean we are standing on the corner, handing the animals out to anyone with $25 that drives by?
Now let’s move on to Halloween and black cats. We are promoting cats on Halloween for $31 and black cats for $13. People started telling us all about the Satanic cults out there that adopt to kill the animals. Many shelters won’t adopt out cats at ALL during the ENTIRE MONTH OF OCTOBER!! I want to shake these people. I presented a scenario. Please review:
It is two days before Halloween. An elderly woman walks in. She lost her cat a few weeks ago. He was 21 years old and she had him almost his whole life. She is heart broken. She did everything she could for him and she shows you pictures as she cries. She decided that she needs another cat in her life, life is not the same without one, and since she is older she is looking to adopt a senior cat. You show her your cat rooms and you watch as she wanders from cat to cat, room to room, petting and cooing softly to the cats. After some time, she decides on the cat that has captured her heart. It is Shadow. A black cat. So you go out and tell her to come back in a month or pick a different cat.
Does this make sense to anyone? Really? Because it is close to Halloween and Shadow is a black cat she must be denied. Shelter policy.
HELLO??? HELLO? Does anyone see a HUGE disconnect here?
These sort of archaic policies need to be put to bed and left there. EVERY adoption, every person goes through the SAME process, whether it is Halloween, or Christmas or Easter. The holiday does NOT change that if you have common sense and if your adoption team is decent and educated. If a woman came in dressed as a witch and said she wanted to adopt a black cat, any black cat, it didn’t matter – would you give HER one? or a 15 year old boy? No but they would fail for OTHER reasons having nothing to do with the holiday. The first person because we don’t adopt “ANY” animal to “ANYONE”. We wait to see a connection and love blossoming on the face and a healthy interaction between person and pet. That woman that just wanted “any cat” wouldn’t pass that. And the 15 year old boy? Well, he has to be 21, so he fails automatically.
Additionally animals being harmed at Halloween is mostly a myth. Does it still happen? Sure, just like it does every OTHER day of the week. If we see animals that were tortured on Dec 20 do we say it was a result of the Christmas holiday? In April is it a result of Arbor Day? No, but if it happens anywhere in October it is attributed to Halloween. I have spent considerable time this week researching the number of animal torture, mutilation and abuse cases in the course of a year. Know what I found? That October does NOT show a higher percentage of these at all. The media just HIGHLIGHTS it more. The media also continues to do “Keeping your pet safe on Halloween” stories every single year, but yet statistics show that there are no increased cases of this. In fact more animals are injured, lost or traumatized during July 4! But I worked in media at one point and it was always an assignment every year. Halloween and protecting animals. We never thought to question it, just pulled up archaic stories and gave out tips. People – let these die, they aren’t real. But shelters use these stories to “protect” their animals from adoption.
In 1996 a news crew did an intensive study around Halloween to see if any more animals were harmed THEN, than any other time. Result? No. No increase or stories of any cruelty to any animals. And really, let’s face it…do people intent on harming animals need to come to a shelter, give their drivers license and ID, home address and phone numbers, vet information, personal references, and pay an adoption fee to get a cat? Umm, no, you can walk outside most supermarkets and adopt a kitten or go to any feral cat community and trap one. People are not coming to us, knowing we will be doing follow up calls to check on the pets in a few days and then again in a few weeks, and handing over all this personal information so they can mutilate the animals.
If it isn’t logical and it doesn’t make sense, then it probably isn’t a real threat.
So the bottom line is this. We love our animals. ALL of them. We are careful with EVERY adoption. Holidays and every day of the week or month. We constantly try to find good homes, we constantly try to market our animals better and we constantly try to save more lives. We are always on the side of the animals.
We always will be.
very well written. you guys are awesome and you are changing things (and people) – keep up the amazing work!
Very good points. I know a family that would be a great home for a dog, the son is allergic so they have to have specific breeds but so far have been turned down because of the lack of a fence. I think some shelters/rescues are so hung up on getting the perfect home that they forget that for most animals the very good home makes then just as happy.
I have gone to a shelter and asked for “any” cat. A local shelter was shutting down and I couldn’t decide which cat to get – they were all so friendly and I knew any one of them would make a great addition to the house. So I asked them to pick one out for me and that is how I got Roy – one of the best cats ever. He had been returned to the shelter twice for aggression issues but he was a pure sweetheart – they just didn’t give him enough time to settle in. I had already adopted two cats from them so that might have helped, but I am glad they worked with me when I didn’t know who I wanted.
Daniela
As a member of the Intenational Coalition Against Declawing I commend you for adopting out declawed cats to people who think declawing is acceptable,rather than letting them take a healthy cat and have him crippled too.
People have the wrong idea that declawing a cat makes him a better pet.You know how wrong that is because as you say, yours and other Rescue Shelters have many declawed cats.
Vets are wrong, declawing does not save homes !
Please help us get declawing BANNED:
http://www.petitionthem.com/default.asp?sect=detail&pet=4312
Vet nurse UK
Daniela, lol. Well I think in that case we would likely talk to you, get to know you and then narrow it down to 2 or 3 and then see which interacted best with you or vice versa.
Although if you’ve already adopted from us then you’re already approved and we know you so……that makes it different too. 😉
Thanks for what you do Kat!
Excellent article. I really like your presentation and then the response to the potential reasons of “why we shouldn’t”. I love your level headed responses and really searching the facts.
I too have worked with some rescues that were really proud of their stringent adoption policies but in the back of my head, I felt they were just looking for a small reason to refuse an adoption.
Thanks for the thought provoking article.
Great job! I am a dog trainer and try to rescue dogs and train them before re homing them so that they can stay in a forever home once they get there. Compassion goes a long way and I wish some kind of proper training went with every adopted pet to teach people to bond with their new family members and truly understand the amazing possibilities. Thanks for all you guys do to help this happen. The yard or no yard isn’t an issue. and thanks for making that among other things clear. Best wishes, Lisa
Wonderful post. Thanks so much for bringing up some key points on adoption and also discussing adopting out declawed cats. Very well written!
Totally irresponsible.
Great article – found you through a link from my local rescue, Angels of Assisi in Roanoke, VA. It was an odd feeling being so scrutinized to adopt an animal whose other options were cage or death, when I could have answered any “free to good home” ad on craigslist as I’d done in the past. I felt lucky to “pass” and be able to bring home our dog, but I also don’t know if the application process was a good screening mechanism. Yes, we had a big fenced-in yard. But fortunately, we also had the patience to work with a vet when our dog, out of desperate separation anxiety, jumped the fence and chewed his way out of crates. Just meeting a bunch of items on a checklist doesn’t make the best home for an animal, and it’s wonderful when a rescue gets to know both the animal and the potential family to ensure a good match, knowing that’s a better caliber for success than a price tag or checklist. There are a lot of people like us who say, “oh, let’s adopt a pet sometime soon” but need that extra nudge, like a sale or an adoption event to actually say, “now’s the time.” Thank you for having a healthy perspective on this!
Excellent article! I desperately wanted to rescue an adult German shepherd from a German shepherd rescue group. I grew up with GS’s and had one of my own for 10 years until he died. Seiko was the love of my life, the perfect dog. I didn’t want a puppy after he died, and I wanted to rescue an unwanted dog. The rescue groups wouldn’t even talk to me because my yard wasn’t fenced. I do not understand how a fenced yard would make me a better owner. Seiko was always outside with me, and he was well trained to stay with me. We played ball, walked, ran and just hung out together. He was never just put outside by himself because I had a fence. We were a team. After he died, I did get another GS, one that I found on craigslist, from a family who couldn’t keep her. A shelter was their next step. She is now my buddy who is with me all the time, in my still unfenced yard. She is voice trained to obey and stay with me. Rigid rules by a rescue group is why I turned to craigslist. A fence does not make someone a good owner. A love of animals does. I also have two rescued cats, something else that the rescue group didn’t recommend with GS’s. The cats, Zelda and Michelin, are best friends with my dog, Deja Vu. Boy, does that rescue group give German shepherds a bad name in their misguided attempt to save them. They missed out on the chance to give one of their dogs a loving forever home because of their own silly rules. So sad for the dogs they get
So…any black cats or dogs adopted today??? Just checking! Reckon it might be a slow adoption day. All the witches and warlocks are probably too busy to come fetch an animal for nefarious reasons. Would be nice if ALL the black cats and dogs were lucky enough to find good homes with well-vetted (pun intended) adopters. Keep fighting the good fight and Happy Howl-O-Ween to all!
Good article. I’m still wary of people wanting black cats, but I agree that this can be taken on a case by case basis. $13 a black kitty! I would take them all if had any room! I love the black (or black and white) ones, they are smart but have strong personalities (aka- usually nuts). The fact of the matter is that you still need to take precautions and move animals. If they don’t move, more cannot be taken in and the place goes under. As simple as that.Oh, and because you took in CATS (especially from NYC!!!!) I will be sending you $20 that I probably don’t have. Nyseg will have to wait! Save more kitties!!! I love the dogs too, but I am sending money right now PURELY because you are taking in cats. (How is that for marketing? hehe) I agree with the marketing. It’s ALL marketing. That’s why I hoped you would get new pics.. and you did, and they are GREAT, by the way. Are you guys still looking for tents? I run across them now and again pretty cheap (considering their size).I will check out your wish list if I can find it.
oh, not Natalia. I loved that cat, and as best I can tell, I’m one of the very few that she let pet her. I just can’t take the heartbreak of a senior cat right now, but wish I could. Well, or more vet bills.Oh, and I have those 3 lb paper trays, a box for you, and I never get there while you are open to drop it off. If I remember, next time I will leave them on your front steps.
Very nice and imformative blog. Well done!
i love reading your article you bring up a lot good points i would just like to know how do you decide when a family or person not right to adopt a dog or cat yeah reduce pet fees a wonder especially for dogs who have been there for years how do you chose the right family or person do you meet them first or by application i would really like to know and do you accept homemade dog treat i love making them
YES! YES YES YES!! Let me tell you my own shelter story: My husband and I just rented an old farmhouse with three acres. With all that room, we decided that it was finally time for a dog, and that we would adopt one from a shelter since there are so many unwanted animals out there. We went to the local humane society, where we found a dog we fell in love with. We submitted our application together with a copy of our lease, which specifically states that we are allowed to have pets in our home.
A few days later we got a call that everything looked good, the shelter just needed a personally addressed letter from our landlord stating that we were permitted to have a dog. Confused, we told them to look at provision 3.5 in the lease, which states “Landlord agrees that Lessor may maintain animals and/or pets on the Property without notice to Landlord.”
“Sorry,” they told us. Our policy is that we will only adopt to renters if their landlord has specifically approved it in writing. I called the landlord up to ask if they will write such a letter.
“Why?” they ask. “It’s already in your lease.”
“I know, I know, it’s just a formality,” I tell them. They say they will call me back. A few days later they call to tell me they will not write such a letter.
“We don’t understand why you need this letter,” they tell me. “The provision in the lease is extremely broad and the fact that you need a letter sounds to our lawyer like you are trying to get us to waive our rights to recovering potential damages caused by your animals. He thinks you’re trying to establish that we are assuming the risk of you obtaining a pet. We won’t do that. You can have as many dogs and cats and whatevers as you want – we don’t care – but we’re not going to waive our rights.”
Back to the shelter. They were adamant. No letter, no dog.
So, there I was, with a lease that EXPRESSLY permitted me to have pets and a dog in a shelter that needed a home.
And you know what I did at the end of the day? I gave up. I called an ad in the local paper and went and picked up a puppy from a backyard breeder for $100. Because I wanted a dog and the shelter refused to let me have one. I don’t know what happened to the dog in the shelter that we picked out and I prefer not to think about it. We did everything we could for her, short of purchasing a house.
Melissa your story is sad but if you ever are looking for a pet again check out other sources like Craigslist, try to adopt directly from a person.
I think rescues and shelters could help out by making direct “owner adoptions” easier. Avoid pets ever reaching a shelter or rescue in the first place.
I recently bought the domain name owneradoptions.com because I think Craigslist is so scary, but it is a popular place currently.
Great blog post Kerry!