Chasing the lands isnt the real value of this tool "per'se.
This guage gives a shooter a reference point of bullet ogive to rifling engagement. With a given bullet.
The more measurements you have, the better you can track changes.
As you stated, it can allow you to chase throat erosion. It helps a shooter to find the ratio at which a given bullet will shoot the best in "that" barrel.
And it can also allow a shooter to adjust thier seating depth if a "new" batch of bullets has a slightly different ogive than the previous box of bullets. A single bullet design can vary box to box. Each bullet swedging press at the factory has tolerances that can be significantly different.
If the factory mixes the bullets from multiple presses, you will get a hodge-podge mixture. For most situations this is moot. Until you are looking for sub MOA performance at long distance, or sub .5MOA benchrest groups.
A good thing is that some manufacturers group the bullets of a single press into single boxes. This way all the bullets in each box will be consistant, relative to each other.
Also, you can measure just each bullet without the case, to check the individual ogive consistancy.
There are probably more than a few more reasons to use this gauge system, but these are my main points of use.
Hope this info helps in some way.
Straight shoot'in and keep it fun!