It is not necessary. You will have improved feel if you want to feel the bullet in the lands or not. The Cortina method only seeks to find a soft enough jam that the bullet will not pull out of the case when extracting a loaded round.
A word of caution. Mr. Cortina is very consistent with neck tension, annealing, etc. If you want to be lazy (I am) and not anneal or only anneal every 3 firings then your neck tension will vary some. A jam depth that didn't stick a bullet could start to stick a bullet after a few firings. For this reason, I use the Wheeler method or the Mark Gordon method to find the point where I am touching the lands. From there I determine where I start my jump.
Other than that, I do the same thing as Mr. Cortina. I tried chasing the lands for a couple barrels. It was a disaster. It works best for me to shoot the load until it goes out of tune. At that point I either tune the load via seating depth, or if things have slowed down significantly, I will add powder to get the speed back, shoot a ladder at distance, and then tune the middle of the node with seating depth in .003" increments. Once I have the gun shooting good again, I run that same load until it will no longer shoot.
When I chased the lands, I was having .006+ per hundred rounds of throat erosion. I would change seating depth to chase it. Eventually my load would slow down or shoot poorly. Then I would have to do a complete new load workup. I got crunched for time once and had some left overs. They were jumping about .075" or more (I was chasing the lands at .010" off). I tried them. Back to good groups and nearly the same speed as when I started. That proved to me that chasing the lands is an effort in futility. Find the seating depth node and shoot until something is wrong. At that point it makes sense to change things up and see if the barrel will shoot or if it is dead.