MP that's very much your interpretation....nowhere does RR imply that normal processes are inferior, or for beginners....
I'd suggest that there are several conflicting realities here:
On the one hand, manufacturers are trying to balance shadow speed and highlight speed for each specified film/dev combo so that most people, most of the time, in most lighting circumstances to ... mostly give decent results. Particularly when film was the only game in town, companies like Kodak were maniacal in producing repeatably good outcomes with their films, chemistry and recommendations.
On the other hand, because shadows develop much more slowly than highlight, getting full shadow speed while not blowing out the highlights typically requires some of ... what did someone call it ... "esoteric" methods. They are not any such thing, of course, they are just less frequently used methods because they
are (or can be) fiddly to get right. Among them are divided two bath development, SLIMT, (semi) stand, and Extereme Minimal Agitation.
The other thing is that the enthusiastic newcomer will see all these choices and want to try everything on the menu because ... it's just plain fun. We've all been there are some point or another. I would never want to discourage exploration by someone new to all this - there is great joy in it. (I fear that some of the commentary here has been unduly strong and could be read as discouraging.)
But, as I have said previously on many occasions to many people, you have to master one film, one developer, and one standard development scheme or those various wandering will be so distracting that one can never really learn to exploit film and printing properly. Personally, it took 40 years of conventional, then Zone techniques before I was remotely ready to tackle semistand and EMA. SLIMT is next because ... exploring is fun.