One other factor than got rounds on the ground more quickly was competition. Believe it or not, the controlling regimental, divisional or corps artillery CP did not automatically detail which troop and battery would be used to adjust its fire onto the target. Instead every troop raced with every other troop to report "ready," that is loaded and pointed at the target and ready to shoot. It was quite a distinction to win adjustment (ranging in the day) and to do so required the troop to have its act together, but overall a good TARA (see my first post in this thread) counted for a lot. This competition shaved seconds, sometimes as much as a minute, off the time to get the first round in the air, and thus got rounds on the target in support of our forward troops.
And if I can hoot for a minute, as a 20-year-old TARA, I won adjustment for my troop on the first regimental mission I ever "fired" on the arty board in our CP, and then carried on to do the same for all the rest on the annual regimental fire mission day in 4 RCHA way back in 1960. The troop signaller, my buddy "Spud" Gallant, and I didn't have to buy beer in the battery canteen that evening.