This is a confusing issue to understand. The main reason it is confusing is because there are several reasons that cause a tip to wander off to one side. What is confusing is that you are getting advise to correct the wayward tip that is caused by two different reasons. You should try to determine the cause of the tip lean before you choose which approach to go with. Re-evaluate the centerline and limb width profile closely and the cause should be evident, then you choose which method. If you assume incorrectly and do the wrong one first, or worse, try both at the same time you could go too far and ruin the limbs.
The binghams directions remedy is for if you simply didn't layout the centerline correctly, deepen the nock groove on the side it points to and then remove a little material on that same side to make the depth of groove the same as the opposing side. The key here is to only remove material near the tip area, not the whole side of the working section of the limb, just enough material removal for a smooth transition at the tip. I think bingham should do a better job with the dirrections he gives. I see too many people that remove material too far down into the working limb from the side the tip is leaning and that just makes things unfixable. Never remove material from the working limb section on the side that the tip is pointing, just from the few inches at the tip only after deepening the groove, and that material removal is just to make both string grooves symetrical. Binghams method is for if the centerline is off and you need to shift the string over some.
If that didn't do enough to correct the lean then you should remove material opposite the lean and that should be taken from the working section of the limb, as illustrated in bjansen's pic. This is for if you have issues in the mid limb area and should remove material from the limb side opposite the lean in order to weeken it and bring the limb tip back arround. You can often see a side bulge on that side when the bow is strung causing it to push the tip around.
Another thing, make small adjustments, don't start off with deepening the groove by a whole 1/8" because that could be too much. Don't get too happy removing material by deepening grooves or removal from the side of the limb because when it gets close it will come around fast. And try one thing at a time. Pull the bow to halfdraw and back down several times so the string sits where it will to see if it is still leans after each adjustment.