Much is made of mentoring and training.

With so much constant change it is necessary to keep up, even if only because of the legal pitfalls of not doing so.

Some agents are assiduous in this but there’s really no substitute for watching the best in action and learning from them.

Being an estate agent is not only about being a good sales person. Indeed, for many, usually of a male persuasion, they would do well to recognise that their best side is sales and they should let ambition slide and avoid becoming terrible managers and even worse directors.

Before Christmas, Eliza Leigh, a guiding light and perfect example of continuous professional development in the truest sense, succumbed to a long illness.

Her memorial service was packed out last week in Knightsbridge – the area in which she operated for almost 40 years.

The reason I mention her, apart from being extremely sad, is that I was lucky enough to work with her for six years in the late 80s and early 90s in a small high-end Chelsea based company called Read Cunningham.

Occasional training and mentoring have a place, but to be able to sit, absorb and learn from someone like that – not that I knew or appreciated it back then – every minute of every day reminds me how lucky I was.

I’m not talking about how much she sold, and she went on to later dominate her market while working for Knight Frank, but rather the way she did it.

Honesty, declining intro fees, knowing who she was acting for, pointing out areas of possible conflict, and all delivered with the strength of a metal fist in a velvet glove.

My time as an agent was spent learning from one or two giants, and despite her car seat being so close to the steering wheel that I couldn’t even begin to get in – polite way of saying she came in a small package – she was one of them.