No. Please just tell me how I can develop good negatives.
Shoot XP2 and have it developed in C41 chemistry by a professional lab that uses control strips and ensures their process is in control every day. That's the only way to ensure consistency.
If you're not using mechanized, calibrated and repeatable processing the results will be different. If we have two people who use the same film and developer, but one does rotary processing in a Jobo and the other uses semi-stand agitation, the developing times will be wildly different. Then we get into temperature, are both people using lab grade calibrated thermometers?
Until all those factors can be controlled, that's why developing times will always be personal for your methods of agitation, temperature control and way of mixing chemicals. We have not even considered individual tastes and desired outcomes. The contrast range I want for a particular subject matter may not be what you want for a different subject; so there can be no single definition of what a "good" negative actually is.
At best, the manufacturers datasheets can only be a starting point because of all these variables.