No, it says you are paying attention and until you gain experience that will allow you to learn faster and keep your eyes and fingers where they still work too....
All three of the popular 30 cals have some potential for bullet seating depth tuning with the Sierra 165 GK. It is very similar to the 168 MK. It works well in 308, 30-06, and 300 mags. (And for the money, does a very good job on accuracy and terminal ballistics too. So it makes a good baseline hunting bullet choice.)
That particular bullet is very forgiving in most chambers and tolerates everything from hard jam to big jumps. That is not to say that there is nothing to be gained from learning to tune with seating depth, but that takes some experience as well.
A quick anecdote to explain what a good starting point would be if I knew nothing about the chamber... Suppose I was going to ask a gunsmith to make a custom hunting rig. He would attempt to chamber for a light touch to 0.005” jump for a dummy round that I would hand him. So, where would I then place that particular hunting bullet for a starting point?
I would observe the COAL when the junction of the bullet bearing diameter hits the boat tail, and line that up slightly (~0.010) above the neck to shoulder junction of the case to avoid seating into a potential donut later on. Of course, this just gets me a sturdy bullet seat. I also already know enough about that particular bullet at that kind of length to know it will feed from a magazine.
Could I have selected a longer length, yes. Could I seat deeper, yes but then I risk a donut issue and rob myself of case volume too. Going a little farther out allows me some room if I find the tuning like a little more jump so I can then seat a little deeper without hitting that donut again.
I’m guessing you get the picture by now. Here is some nightstand reading on depth tuning.
https://precisionrifleblog.com/2020/03/21/bullet-jump-and-seating-depth-reloading-best-practices/
That is one article that leads to several. Reading those is food for thought and comes for free, so I would soak it up while you practice cause eventually you will want to learn to run a sweep for powder charge and one for seating depth.