University of Dallas Tower Magazine Summer 2021

Page 20

core discipline

You Can Do WHAT With a Biology Degree? DC-Based Alumnus Publishes “The Ultimate Guide to Running With Your Dog” By Aaron Claycomb ith just $40 worth of flyers and a single pair of tennis shoes, Bryan Barrera, BA ’09, embarked on his canine running venture. In 2013, after competing in the Dallas Marathon and reading about a dog runner in Chicago, he launched Dallas Dog Runner. “I thought, hey, if I could get paid to run, that’s definitely what I want to do,” he recalled. “And obviously, I love dogs.” Later that year, his family moved to Washington, D.C., where he held a part-time bookkeeping gig and renamed the company, appropriately, D.C. Dog Runner. Within three months, the former Wells Fargo mortgage officer doubled his income. “And after six months, I didn’t look back, and I’ve been running with dogs full time in some capacity ever since,” he said. Overwhelmed with the exhausting routine of daily appointments and too few dog runners aboard, Barrera convinced his wife, Suzanne Marie, BA ’07, to help with the business. “Once she stepped in,” he continued, “that allowed me to really focus on the operations and other facets.” In surveying and researching the niche dog running market, Barrera explained, “Everybody has a yard in Texas, so there’s not this big, robust market for dog running. But in D.C., it’s so much a part of the culture because people live closer together in smaller spaces, and they still need to get their dogs out.” “Our job is to actually figure out how far and how fast,” he said. “That’s the real work that has to be done and what my book aims at, in fact.” The Ultimate Guide to Running With Your Dog: Tips and Techniques for Understanding Your Canine’s Fitness and Running Temperament was released in mid-March and is available from Barnes & Noble, Amazon, Target and more. A comprehensive how-to guide for outdoor companion runners, the book weaves together personal experience with practical assessment and instruction, with topics ranging from the best terrains and running with multiple dogs to the best collars and leashes for active dogs, and what to do if your dog gets injured.

Bryan Barrera, BA '09, graduated with a biology degree but is now a successful entrepreneur and author in Washington, D.C.

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TOWER MAGAZINE

Waggin’ Success This marks the seventh year of D.C. Dog Runner. As of today, more than a dozen dog runners and about 60 dogs help make up the company's roster. “As far as running and operating a dog-running business, in some instances I definitely get that I’m like a glorified dog walker,” said Barrera. “But my entrepreneurial success is proof you can do great things from humble beginnings. “Writing the book sort of helped me figure out what I wanted to do,” said Barrera, “and now it’s going to help solidify that we are the best in the country at doing this.” Barrera recalled of his time as a UD student, “All the writing I had to do was just like pulling teeth, but I definitely came out well-rounded.” A biology major who envisioned himself one day working in the health care field, he said, “I knew pretty early on that wasn’t me. “Ultimately,” explained Barrera, “there’s the conversation of work-life balance. I have a great respect and admiration for my friends who are now physicians, Ph.D.s, attorneys and the like.” Unwilling to forgo his family obligations, he said, “I wasn’t going to stop being Dad because I was writing a book. My goal was always to understand that my career is subordinate and subservient to my family. … I have a business to build,” added the father of five, “but I also have a family that needs Cheerios.”


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