You can just plug this into your calculator and find out on your own.
For the load on my calculator right now, 500 yards is 57.85" of drop (3.2 mils). A 98 yard zero is 57.95" of drop (3.2 mils), a 102 yard zero is 57.74" (3.2 mils). So 0.1" of difference at 500 yards.
At 700 yards, it's 145.27" for a 100 yard zero, 145.42" for a 98 yard zero, and 145.12" for a 102 yard zero. Again, it's 0.15" at 700 yards. That is less than you can adjust out even when zeroing at 100 yards (it's under the .25MOA/0.1MIL adjustment of your scope).
It is completely inconsequential, and you can even play with numbers 5, 10, and 15 yds off on your zero range and see what happens. It just might surprise you.