^^^ what padom said. People, myself included in the past, will spend half their barrel life doing load development. Be meticulous with brass prep, find a good flat velocity node, tweak seating depth if needs be to get moa or better ( hopefully better) and go shoot matches. I would bet one of your velocity nodes is somewhere around that 23.4-24.2 spread based on the averages the picture provides. Make sure you're not getting pressure signs or very close to pressure signs ( could possibly go over pressure if the temp gets much hotter, get rain in your chamber).
Try this next range trip :
Spend extra time prepping your brass, anneal, consistent shoulder bump, evenly chamfer and trim. If the brass is all mixed lot random brass, sort it by headstamp and volume.
Load 3 rounds each in 1/10 gr increments from 23.4-24.2 gr. You should have 27 rounds. Separate them in to 3 groups. Put up a target with 9 dots in it. Fire one round at each of the 9 targets. Let barrel cool. Repeat using the same dot for the same charge for your next two batches of rounds. Chrono every shot. Record velocities for each ladder. Go back and look for some place in each group where velocity doesn't really change. It's obviously going to change some, but look for the lowest change in the ladder. Hopefully it's a 3/10gr spread. See if there's a correlation in the velocity flat spot between the 3 groups. If so, you found a velocity node. Now look at your target corresponding to that node. You can measure each group, compare, and see if all the targets from that spread fell in to a nice group. If it's tight enough, reload a few 5 Rd groups using the middle charge from that ladder test to verify its good. If the group is massive, use the middle charge of that velocity node and fine tune your seating depth to tighten the group. If you have access to over 100 yards to do the test, even better.
What was your barrel twist again? Not sure if all woa barrels are 1:8 twist. But if you're running a slow twist, like 1:9, or slower, that could or could not have an affect on group as well. All depends. I had a 1:9 twist that would not shoot 69gr bullets but would shoot 72gr fine, then wouldn't shoot 77gr at all. It ran best with lighter bullets in the 52gr range