Hi:
This is what I would like to hear from you:
[....]
Just to offer another point of view (and please excuse the pun

)
I decided a long time ago (around the time of that
earlier discussion in 2015, linked-to by Mario) that I would record the photographer's location in the GPS coordinates, and then I would add - if it was appropriate for the photograph - a note in the Description field about the direction I was looking at the time I took the photo.
I enjoy doing cityscapes and streetscapes and it was illogical to record the coordinates of the
subject or subjects in my photos (such as a distant hilltop or a church spire for example) because there will often be more than one object of special interest in my photos.
Another reason for this choice was because, for a given set of photos taken within minutes of each other at a particular location or during a particular shooting session, I preferred my photos' GPS coordinates literally to be a good approximation of the 'track' of my walk or my adventure around that site. If instead I had chosen to annotate a photo's GPS fields with (say) the coordinates of a famous building some tens or hundreds of metres away - and if I'd done this probably more than once per session - then a map-based view of my photos at some later date would imply that I'd used some super-power to fly across country between (for example) those buildings
I've accepted the following small compromise with this option: I will typically add a series of keywords relating to
each of the interesting features in a photo, therefore there will be no guaranteed correlation between any photo's GPS coordinates and the results returned for example from a keyword-based search. I can use my map to get me into an area of countryside OK, but I'll rely on my keywords to locate my photos of any specific landmark or 'feature'.
It's a problem with no black & white answer of course, but I still marvel at the ease with which - nowadays - we can correlate our photos with our travels and our meanderings!!
Colin P.