There’s two things going on here. IMO, one is correct (under circumstances) and one is not.
Holding wind is the “correct” portion. If you have single target and/or stable wind, you can dial. Nothing wrong with either. Dialing and holding both have their uses and sometimes it’s preference. I could type quite a bit, but I think most everyone gets it.
Now, on to the “incorrect” part, in my opinion. Referencing the edges of the plate.
When we start focusing on a certain part of the target (center, edge, etc), that’s where many times we will subconsciously reference for corrections.
For example, if we are focused on the center of plate and we are holding center, if we see our miss splash at 1mil, we move that 1 Mil to center on corrction.
If we are focusing on the edge of the plate with center crosshair, and we see our miss splash at 1 mil, many times if we aren’t careful, we move that 1 Mil to the edge of the plate instead of center. Then our error budget on plate is much less.
IMO, this is one of the biggest reasons we see the “same spot” miss called over and over. Most people don’t miss more than .2 or .3 off the side of the plate (unless at longer ranges). So, they are focused on the edge of the plate, they miss .2 off. What they should be doing is making a .5 correction to center. But, they are under time and thinking subconsciously. So, they move over .2 to the edge. Wind doesn’t need to change much to throw it off the edge. So, you have this scenario:
Shooter holds edge and misses
Spotter: miss just off the right edge
Shooter only corrects .2 to edge, fires again and wind picked up just enough to keep it off the plate
Spotter: same place you need to come left
Shooter: I did come left, something is wrong