Obviously you don't want to develop much in this predev step, or you wouldn't get a color image. What you do want, though, is enlarge the smallest latent image specks in order to make them more easily developable by the CD. For this reason I wondered whether Michael's LC devs would be a better choice than Rodinal which loses a stop of ISO speed to begin with. We may have to dilute Michel's formula quite a bit, but it should work better. All my statements are worthless, of course, unless I have experimental data to back up my claims.In any case, the 'predev' idea is to use only mild b&w development before continuing normal C-41. So it should be fine as long as you're not developing a full negative etc.
The pre-dev only gives a small improvement, but I imagine that improvement would increase with a C-41 push and would stack well with pre-flash to get a little bit more out of it.
Since both techniques trigger different effects, they should add up nicely. Preflashing (ideally) creates a bunch of stable but not developable image centers (typically clusters of two Silver atoms) which are then enlarged to fully developable (>= 3 Silver atoms per cluster) by the actual exposure. The predev step only works with developable image centers, but boosts their development speed, which in turn allows their full development before overall image contrast runs away.