I agree that liquid soap process is different than bar soap. I personally prefer liquid soapmaking to bar, but to each his/her own.
I use a much simplified method that the wonderful folks from here have helped me refine. If I am making hand soap, I use the half water/half glycerin method to speed trace. If I am making laundry or dish soap, I use 1/2 ounce of grated bar soap to speed trace(I use the end pieces or crumbles from cured soaps.) I also use 60/40 or 70/30 KOH/NaOH recipes for household soaps. Makes my trace time minimal.
I stick to 3% or less superfat to help keep my soap as clear as possible, and avoid lard and tallow.
Now I also use cold process to avoid having that whole long cooking time: I just pour the hot lye water into the melted oils in the crockpot, stickblend until I get to trace. Unplug the crockpot, wrap in a blanket or heavy beach towel and walk away. I go back to it 6-12 hours later and check for zap. If no zap, I dilute. If I am unfamiliar with the recipe, I begin with 75% paste weight water, then add 4 oz at the time until mostly diluted, then 1 oz at the time. Once I know the dilution rate, I just dump it in, turn the crockpot on, and walk away until I see bubbles under the lid. Stir down, then keep a closer eye on it until I see just one soap lump. I add my EO's and turn my crock pot off at that time, and allow it to cool overnight. Soap done in one day, with minimal attention.
And there is no reason that you can't make paste and let it sit there a day or so if life gets busy before you dilute. I routinely make a double batch of laundry soap at the time, then put half of the paste into a plastic container and wait until I need it.(My crockpot won't hold the whole batch with dilution water added.)