You have a range of choices if you are using colour negative film. They include, but are not restricted to, the following methods.
1) You can get nearly full correction with an 80A (assuming that you are shooting in household tungsten lighting) and lose two stops or maybe a little more.
2) You can do partial correction with an 80C (for example) and lose one stop. As an option you can overexpose up to a further stop or more.
3) You can do no correction and just overexpose up to, or a little over, two stops.
Method 1: A blue conversion filter just reduces the intensity of the red end of the spectrum down to the level of the blue end (put rather simplistically) so you need to increase the overall exposure to compensate.
Method 3: With no corrective filter, you just increase the exposure so that the blue-sensitive layer gets correct exposure (the same as method 1) and the red-sensitive layer gets overexposed (unlike method 1). Colour negative film can usually cope with that amount of overexposure, but the results will probably not be as good as method 1.
Method 2 lies between 1 and 3. In general the more exposure you give, the better the shadow detail will look. Underexposure of colour neg film leads to graininess, and the blue-sensitive layer is likely to be the least well exposed. It is usually the grainiest of the three layers even when exposed in light of the correct colour temperature.
Best,
Helen