Do a 10 round ladder at book coal to find max and look for a ES of 20 fps or better across at least .4 gr of powder. At .2 gr increments. So say book max is 40 grs. I'd start at 38.7 and load 1 round of 38.7, 38.9, 39.1, 39.3, 39.5, 39.7, 39.9, 40.1, 40.3 and 40.5. So 10 rds. Say 39.7 grs is 2785 fps. And 39.9 is 2800 fps, 40.1 2802 fps and 40.3 2805 fps. And 40.5 is 2820. ES of 5 across .6 grs(39.9 to 40.3 grs) load the middle (40.1 grs), test jump in .3 thou increments.
You can use Cortina's way to find the lands. Or I just use a properly headspaced cased FL sized round with a clean chamber/bore. A long seated round. Bolt removed push round into chamber lightly with pinky and it hangs, the ojive hangs in the rifling, remove and shorten by 2 thou, repeat till you feel shoulder bump the chamber and bullet doesn't hang in the lands/rifling. Back up 5 thou and Repeat. Now you know 0 jump. I do this first and depending on the bullet stat at 10 or 60 thou to test ladder. So find lands, ladder test at your best guesstimate of the correct jump, find a low ES node during ladder (and maybe max charge weight safety), to test jump with. Test jump at 3 thou increments, like Cortina says. And I go back and forth as needed between charge weight and jump to get a moa of .5 or less and a ES of 15 fps, or less. Thats my way. Hope it helps. Only other advice I'd add is get the Hornady bullet and headspace comparators and know how to bump the shoulder back 2 thou from fired/correctly set up FL sizing die, and use cbto/bbto for your measurements as cbto is much more consistent then coal. And FL size only period. As Cortina says. And start annealing. Annealezz is what I have and like it. Clean anneal trim size clean load.