Since you are using a single shot, magazine space and loading mechanism function won't be a worry for you - but it can be if you are loading for a magazine fed gun.
Still you need to be careful of overall length for other reasons:
Too long and the bullet may jam in the riflings; if you have too hot a load you could raise pressures to high levels.
Too long and a jammed bullet may remain jammed when an unfired case is removed; powder dumps all over in the action making a mess; it can be hard to get a jammed bullet out; or if you don't notice the bullet in the barrel, loading another cartridge could REALLY jam the first bullet, telescope the second one into the case and you have a bigger mess - especially if you try to fire this. Likely you'd notice it before you got 'round to pulling the trigger, but if you don't - its bad business.
Finally, different bullets from different makers have different shaped ogives (points) and can result in different overall cartridge lengths even with the same bullet weights.
And the cannelure (knurled ring around the bullet) may or may not be appropriate for your cartridge. Some bullets may have 2 crimp grooves or cannelures for different cartridges: note some Speer bullets in 30 cal had one crimp groove for 30-06/ 30-40 and one for the 300 win mag.
So I do like others have said, learn where the lands touch a particular bullet in my gun in my cases. For hunting ammo I then seat the bullet a few 1/1000's deeper to be sure of easy chambering and removal. I establish the seating depth and THEN begin working up my load.
To find where my bullets touch the lands, I take a partially sized empty case and partially seat a bullet. Then try to chamber it. I keep seating the bullet deeper until I can barely chamber the round. Then I'll smoke the bullet or color it with a magic marker. Rechamber and see how much the lands contact the bullet by the scrub marks left on the bullet. I'll then seat the bullet deeper, recoat the bullet, rechamber until the scrub marks disappear. I may then screw the seater down 1/4 to 1/2 turn and lock the seater stem - this is for hunting ammo and for safety and easy functioning.
For target accuracy some folks like their bullets right on the lands, hard on the lands or like folks above said, a few hairs off the lands. There are special tools for this if you want to get fancy.
I guess this is a long way of saying that it isn't always necessary or even wise to seat bullets so the cannelure is at the case mouth. The one exception is when the bullet must be crimped. The cannelure is there to receive the crimp and hold the bullet firmly so it doesn't get pushed deeper into the case (esp in a tube magazine gun like 30-30 Win, 45-70) or back out from recoil in heavy recoiling guns. AND if you need to crimp but your best overall cartridge length doesn't place the cannelure in the right location, get a Lee Factory Crimp die and it will crimp your bullet where you want it.
I'd suggest you carefully read through several loading manuals regarding case length and overall case length and bullet seating - they really are pretty important.