I follow a different logic. The minimal shoulder bump you mention is extremely important but , I believe, for a different reason. When a resized case is chambered the front is supported because the ejector pushes the round forward until the chamber stops the shoulder. Any gap due to a "bump" dimension is at the rear of the case between the casehead and boltface. When fired, gas pressure obturates the brass and seals it to the chamber walls. The stretch can't go forward since the shoulder is in contact with the chamber. The case body is sealed to the chamber walls so that portion of the case is relatively fixed. The stretch goes toward the boltface gap and is concentrated in the very short section of the case behind the supporting chamber wall and forward of the web.
When loading for the range I neck size but only bump when the pressure needed to cam over the bolt during chambering becomes stiff. And then I only bump enough to reduce the pressure to an amount I find acceptable for my rifles. If I have done the steps correctly the shoulder is tight and the case has pushed the ejector back so the casehead is supported on the boltface.
Loading for hunting or other purposes is different. I increase the "bump" to guarantee chambering in field conditions.
When loading new cases there is an extra step. Some new brass can be quite short, especially .338LM. I'm sure you have seen this as well. I have found some at .007". That is a lot of stretch to force into the short unsupported portion of case just forward of the web. Initial stretch must go forward where it is distributed over a longer portion of the case. If not, the case, just forward of the web, will be strained and permanently weakened. My new cases get slightly squeezed with a set of padded pliers so that the upper body, just below the shoulder, is slightly out of round. On the first firing the bolt needs to force the case into the chamber with enough drag to overpower the ejector spring so that the casehead is in firm contact with the boltface. When fired the case becomes formed to that chamber. I only do this on the first firing of a new case.
I'm sure others use different techniques.
Thank you,
MrSmith