Some people's reloading practices seem to be more to the benefit of their own psychosis then any real down range benefit.
I've found that with good quality components (lapua brass, berger bullets) and quality reloading equipment (autotrickler with FX-120i for example), you can make almost any reasonable load work. As
@Sheldon N mentions, with my 6BRA for example, I can get low SD's/ES's with most any reasonable powder charge, but I do weigh to 0.02 grains (my own psychosis perhaps). For bullet seating, I started at 10 thou off the lands with 105 berger hybrids, and I have no clue how far they are jumping now as I don't measure or chase lands. Still shoots tiny holes.
There's a lot of lore and myth in reloading, with a lot of reloading "facts" based more on mere anecdotal experiences then anything scientific and qualitative.
On the flip side, when you go too simple like the "Satterlee method", you don't gain any real useful data, besides approximate velocity per charge weight. You're certainly not going to find any so-called "node" with that method.
I agree with
@Dthomas3523, in that you should test for yourself what makes a difference and what doesn't, rather then blindly following someone's method because they have a cool YouTube channel or are on a podcast. For PRS style shooting, some shooters sure do waste their time in the reloading room performing tasks that don't really matter.