Sounds good..
Remember that we use proprietary technology that permits us to use overlapping channels such as 2,3,4,5,7,8,9,10, etc on the 2.4Ghz spectrum. Your testing equipment may see this as an error and cause your reports to show cci and aci. Our APs use channelfly and beamflex to mitigate this interference and work around those issues by ensuring that signal is sent directly to the client and not necessarily to the nearby APs. So, while your tools may see co-channel interference, that may not necessarily be the case with the APs themselves. At least not to the same level that the test equipment may see it. Take a look a this short video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvIu_g3nN4g.
The best way to test and verify that your network is operating as expected is by using real clients with real data. Grab your devices and run some high quality videos such as 4k or HD from real sites on the internet. Make sure those sites have good quality streaming services. See if you detect any issues on a few of those devices.
Things you may want to consider are data rates allowed at the moment. May want to lock in min BSS rates of 12Mbps or higher if no 802.11b clients are being used in the environment or they are at a very minimal use. This will help improve your network performance and prevent slow clients from causing issues later on. Again, only do this if you are sure you don't have a lot of b clients or devices that rely on these data rates to operate running in your network. Most devices today don't, but just to be sure.