My own experience:
Have visual patience or someone calls it follow through. Hold the gun until front sight lifts. If I see front sight lift up and muzzle flash (mostly indoor), the bullet goes to where I aim. If front sight dips first before lifts, I start cursing myself.
Accept wobble. It's OK. Wobble with sight picture maintained, the hole is still pretty close to where you want the bullet to go.
Strong weak hand grip with firm contact on bottom of trigger guard from both hands would help. Slight jerk or trigger slap won't move the gun much, at least in close distance (5-10 yard).
That's some of the simplest and best advice out there. I like to run a "reverse" FAST as a cold drill (start with four to the circle) and then finish up the session with ten rounds on a B8 at 25 yards. I think leaving the range with confidence is a big deal.
The results of the cold drill can also change what I work on that day. Did I yank the trigger on the head shots? Time to bust out the dummy rounds. Did I fumble the reload? Time to work some strings with reloads.
Last edited by 98z28; 03-03-2011 at 03:01 PM. Reason: add a thought.