For some reason when it comes to art there seems to be this belief that there is a set amount of practice and then you will be "good enough" and practice is no longer necessary.
However, if you look at any other skill we don't believe this. People in complex professions like legal or medical are constantly going back and learning more. Athletes practice constantly, musicians practice constantly.
Visual art is no different.
I strongly suggest that you vary your practice or you will get bored.
I don't practice the bean specifically so much anymore, but I do gestures and use class mode constantly.
I go to a live in person event once a week, I use Draw This on you tube for a streaming drawing session once a week, and then I generally use this site at least once a week for a 30 to 60 minute human figure study.
In the morning I use the animals for a 10 minute daily sketch.
and the constant in the human figure drawing is the gesture.
It warms you up, it gets you in the right frame of mind, it gets you looking, it gets you ready to work. And when you have a single human figure that you are working from it lets you learn their proportions, and shape. How they move. So when you sit down to do a longer image you are ready to go you have already studied them.
Also if you are weak in an area ,focus on it.
I have done several studies using this site to zoom in and just do noses or mouths.
About once a month I do just a hand or foot study.
If you want to get really good you have to learn to enjoy practice for the sake of practice. You have to love it, and view it as part of your creation of art. Not a means to an end.