Be sure to use a measurement system that does not measure off the tip of the bullet.
Greg's advise is great, save the bullet that you use to measure OAL, keep it in a tiny parts bag in your die box.
You should measure the oal on your barrel on a regular basis, as barrels are finicky on what will shoot bug holes, especially if you are shooting some brand of a Very Low Drag bullet.
Learning to measure the OAL to the .001 is the beginning of serious accuracy shooting.
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I have been using a method that will repeat to the .001 with some practice. Slit a case neck one time and one time only with a thin Dremel cut off wheel, insert a bullet in the case neck, now chamber the round. At first you may have left the bullet pulled out too far, and the lands will grab the bullet with a result of pulling it out. So, push the bullet further back in the case, start over. It is often helpful to put the rifle in a rifle vise, and insert the cleaning rod in the barrel to begin with to knock the bullet out if/when it gets stuck in the lands.
This process goes quickly, and you should measure each brand of bullet, keep that bullet in a plastic bag in your die box to measure the lands growth.
Benchrest shooters and long range shooters also examine the bullet on live round to see if they have equal lands marks on the bullet for a "jam" length. This Jam length is then adjusted to .000 into the lands or .000 off the lands, but determining the Jam length is critical.
There are several methods used in accurately measuring OAL, you just need to master one of them if you are wanting the best accuracy in your rifle. I do bed the rifle, freefoat the barrel, and adjust trigger before I ever fire a shot.