My understanding is that the logic to seating bullets close to the lands is to minimize the jump so that the bullet starts off relatively well aligned with the rifling. In fact, a number of bench rest shooters seat there bullets to touch the lands.
I agree with Bullseye. Every gun/cartridge is different and you will need to experiment with the OAL (along with many other variables) to determine which works best in a particular rifle
Most of my reloading is for heavy barreled bolt action varmint rifles and I find the best accuracy with the bullets seated .010 to .020 off the lands. If you are reloading primarily for hunting, then I strongly recommend not exceeding the published OAL for your bolt guns. In this case, it is important that the cartridges feed smoothly from the magazine.
Also, if you are concerned with seating your bullets close to the lands, a great tool is the Sinclair Bullet Comparator. For a given rifle, you only need to determine the best seating depth for one bullet make/type. After you determine the comparator measurement for that bullet, you can change to another bullet type/make and just seat it to the same comparator reading - and the jump will be the same.