I always go solo when at it for myself. Early on I had the same situations as you describe. In those days all I had was recurve. With that thing I had no alternative except try different things. Getting outside my box and trying absurb tactics really changed the game for me.That might be......if "they're coming to you". Most of the time hunting solo, I'm going to them.....and they absolutely know I'm there. At that point, there's generally lots of eyes, ears, and noses tuned in to my approach and really short ranges generally aren't the norm. Every shot I've taken past 40, that was "as close" as I was going to be able to get.
When I started guiding that threw a entirely different set of shenanigans into the fold. Trying to get guys with no idea what's going on, set and bring game to them so they don't have to move. Near as I can tell there's about 7 million ways to screw it up and a handful of ways to pull it off. With all the experience (@#$%ery) I've obtained, it still usually takes 3 or 4 encounters before we can get it done.
Whether a guy takes a step at last moment and snaps something noisy, instead of leaning. Maybe he's kneeling instead of standing or vice versus. Maybe wind swirls. Maybe he's on backside of funnel obstacle. Maybe multiple bulls come in and hang up and he gets impatient and moves getting spotted by the silent one coming in from blind spot. The list is endless.
Point is, the struggle is where it's at for me. There is nothing in this world I've found to be more fulfilling than guiding. Especially when it's been a struggle, my hunters are exhausted, frustrated/mad at me and everything else. We just keep after it day in day out. When it finally comes together and a bull gets into 30ish mark, hunter makes the shot. Walk up to him and he's lost all faculties. That the pay off for me.
I've not had one of those guys ever regret waiting.
How everybody else rolls is thier business. No judgements from me. Lord knows I've messed up plenty.
Hats off to anyone who can get it done outside the 40 mark.