I get the whole bow shaped pretty good, except leave the outer limbs a little wide to allow for alignment adjustments. Then I go straight to the proper length string, brace it, and put it on the tillering tree(rope and pulley system) to see how the limbs are balanced in relation to each other and my grips on bow and string. I draw the bow on the tree, and if one limb needs weakened so that the nock point tracks straight down, I weaken it as needed by narrowing the width. If it starts to get too narrow, I may trap it more and/or sand the glass... but if it was designed and layed up proper, with accurate lams, it shouldn't need much help.
Like with wooden bows, I work to synchronize the limbs, relative to my holds on bow and string, so that the arrow nock comes perfectly straight back... and leaves straight away... and when I get it as good as I can the tiller measurements at brace are whatever they are. They are an end result of my efforts... not a predetermined guide or goal. It makes for an inherently tuned bow that won't require fussing with nock point adjustments.
In a nutshell, I shape the bow, then go straight to the short string... then directly to the tillering tree.