Lockdown,
I am running SolidWorks here.
When I am ready to make my drawing, I look at the 3D_model and I work out what views are needed for a clear description of the part. I might need two. I might need five or six, plus some sections.
In nine years of SolidWorks, I have yet to use an actual isometric view. Often, I do not bother applying a 3D_view, because it provides no useful information. Every other time, there is specific information I want to show off, and I rotate the view so that the viewer can see this. This is what goes on the drawing. If there is another specific piece of information I need to show and I cannot get it into the 3D_view, I rotate the 3D_model again, and apply another one. Often, I rotate and orient 3D_views to fit in the space available. Put yourself in the place of your reader, and try to anticipate what will confuse them.
I try very hard to draw everything at 1:1 scale. I try to get everything on the smallest sheet possible.
Drafting is a language, not a set of procedures. You should be trying to communicate. Follow the projections. Apply dimensions and tolerances as per the standard. Add section views and details as per the standard. Make sure all the information the user requires is shown clearly.
JHG