Back in my early days of "Reamer design", I made a cartridge that began with a 416 Rigby and made a neck and shoulder out of the body brass. There were issues with the brass causing accuracy problems with necks that were .012 thick (30 cal cartridge) and the thing I found was that the shoulder was causing too many irregularities due to it's variations in thickness. The only solution I found to work on that was to make tooling and fixture the cases in a CNC, then internally back-bore the shoulder and shoulder to neck radius, along with turning the outside to match. This way, the shoulder brass was equal in thickness all the way around. It acted more predictable when run in a FL die. While the thickness wasn't perfect, it was so close it didn't matter, and the neck was centered up better and stayed much closer to perfect as the brass aged. That brass was fired a gazillion times (60+), and is still loaded today. It's also very straight. That cartridge, while superior to the WSM in many ways was a serious pain in the ass to keep shooting.
I don't know of a way to do an operation like that by hand, but, I think the process is important. Thick shoulder brass is problematic. Uneven shoulder brass is even worse. How to cut the inside of a shoulder to dimension without a CNC lathe I do not know. Case forming is an art, and takes many mistakes to learn. My toughest lesson to learn, use a factory cartridge...
.015 necks will be very tough to keep competitive.