My rule of thumb for a starting point for finding the development compensation for extremely long exposures due to reciprocity failure is:
For every doubling from the original, non-adjusted, metered exposure time, reduce development be 10%.
Example: The meter says 4 minutes and the adjusted exposure (from a reliable chart from the manufacturer or testing) is 19 minutes (my times for 320Tri-X, BTW).
One doubling of 4 is 8, a further doubling of 8 = 16. 19 minutes is a lot closer to 16 than to the further doubling of 16 which would be 32, so I'd just develop 20% less, or an approximate N-1. Hope that's clear.
As you can see, even for very long exposures, you may not need much development compensation. I likely wouldn't compensate at all for a 60-second adjusted exposure, since the metered exposure time would be less than 30 seconds (i.e., no doubling). And, keep in mind that many scenes that require very long exposures are not all that contrasty and often benefit from the increased contrast.
I've used this method for exposures that lasted up to several hours with success.
Best,
Doremus