Couple of thingsYou forgot Honk, check the system map for interesting planets Dedicated exploration goes:
Press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, fly to distant ELW only to find it's a High Metal Content, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, get really bored and scan a gas giant for Ammonia based life, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map, press the jump button, scoop, honk, check system map....
Fly to distant ELW only to find it's a High Metal Content -> Use the sound Luke! ELWs make a distinct jungle sounds in the system map when selected.
When you check the system map, do you only check for high value stuff? If so, maybe also look out for binary land-able planets, landable planets close to the sun, landable binary moons, very small potato moons, those sort of things.
What you're describing is not Dedicated Exploring, it's travelling with occasional scanning for monetary purposes. Exploration would imply investigation not just for monetary incentives, but because you're interested in the thing you're investigating. And now I'm falling for the No True Explorer fallacy, so to counter that: there is of course not one way to explore, but as many ways as there are explorers. So I'll immediately adjust that to: What you're describing is not Dedicated Exploring, it's just one way to explore