Bearing and base length won't matter to seating.
The tool datum won't matter to either CBTO or COAL.
If your seating testing leads to x.xxx as best, as measured by any common tool, then you just repeat that.
However, the nose shape (ogive radius) affects tool datum.
So for valid BTO or CBTO, you need to 1st qualify the nose shape.
You can do this with a Bob Green Comparator (BGC), or separate.
This is resolving a comparative difference between seating stem datum to proposed land contact datum, from bullet to bullet
If you were really committed to seeing a difference, you could separate measurements to estimate drag, and derive BC from each individual bullet. This is weight, diameter, OAL, end diameter, base length and angle, bearing length, nose length, ogive radius, and meplat diameter.
Of these, the biggest impact(to BC) in variance is likely meplat diameter.
Yet, I see no shiny toys to measure that..
I haven't read of anyone doing all this in a long time. Henry Childs was the last I knew of,, [a BRC forum member posting over ~20yrs ago]. I suggest, and I'm sure Henry would that half measures (or less) are a waste of time to do, and actually acting on them is outright foolish.
You're better to just get good bullets in a big batch.
Ideally, we could procure bullets pre-qualified like this. Someone with a Keyence laser comparator that could get instant readings, loading into spreadsheet fields, for BC estimation -per bullet.
They're VERY expensive, but If I were a big bullet maker I would do this.
Provide special offerings that match (as declared) in estimated BC.
I'm thinking those bullets would need to cost an extra buck each. !!