to speed up the process and reduce waste.
I took some teachings by a retired "optic" printer that made his career in the wedding business. He was a full time printer, first class, he had a remarkable expertise and he was really good at job. He told me that usually he nailed prints at first try to suit taste of the photographers he worked with that were not many. A powerful wedding photographer could require several printers for him alone
There are some tricks. First is white balance, a white dress (wedding) or shirt usually works great as a reference for the balance, if not there best is that the photographer spends a shot with the model showing a grey card, then if the printer man simply adjusts the color head to have standard readings for the grey card then he has a good print at first try, beyond further manipulations. Next prints not having the grey card but with same light will have to be adjusted for exposure but not much for balance.
One thing he did was taking skin color readings (on the easel) for the frame that had the grey card, so he could figure the color head adjustment in the other frames for that particular model for just his skin tone. Every model has an skin tone that can be slightly adjusted but not coarsely manipulated.
He had disciplined photographers, he had a close feedback with them to make things easy and great, they were reluctant to use grey cards, but he ended working only for those with whom he could make a perfect team, ending in amazing results, an interesting case because general case was photographers "throwing rolls to lab".
The analyzer is a powerful tool, making strips is for learning, he was saying, with the analyzer you predict the color in each spot, so you know exactly what will result, still it takes a lot (a lot!) of training, skills and capability to visualize well the print from the spot readings and anotations you take.
A bit it's like previsualization in the zone system, if you spend a 8x10" sheet you want to know what will result before you trigger, this is similar, I guess.
Another (joking) advice he gave is "fuck the groom". He was saying: By all means if having to make a decision you have to favor the bride, expose/balance for the bride and later do what you can with the groom, you may burn/dodge him but if you make a single print with the bride not shining then you are dead

smetimes even it's better is the groom is suboptimal, specially if the bride is in the same frame, she has to shine, like Hollywood.
For landscape it's the same, you need very skilled visualization, clouds (not at sunset) are usualy a good reference for the white. If clouds are not well balanced the pitfall is easy detected, again we need a large deal of previsualization skills, from readings we have the sky tones, vegetation, etc.
With the analyzer we need strong previsualization skills, our brain has to assemble the image in the mind from the readings we take on the easel, not easy, a bit is like blindfold chess, it takes a good player.
Anyway we can combine analyzer and test strips until we are well trained, the better the previsualization skills the less strips...
IMO if light in the taking was good then the color analyzer allows more an straight forward job. If we have a complex lightning then the printing is also complex. When face is illuminated by grass or by blue sky in the shadow then we may have diffrerent white balances in the scene, if corrective filters in the taking are not used in those situations also spectral footprint may be different, we also may play with that for aesthetics, in particular tungnsten vs daylight may may nice color counterpoints.