You know you can hit the edit button if you have made a spelling mistake and easily fix it.
V2 or GSR1000R makes no difference. Suspension Tuning is the same for all bikes. I assume you mean "raised the rear of your ducati to gain a bit more front end steer". Read up on Rake and Trail. Plenty of stuff out there. Perhaps you are after quicker steering. You can either have steering quickness or stability or a range in between. Raising the rear will steepen the rake and reduce trail. This will result in quicker steering and may be great for slow tight corners or quick change of direction in the s turns. The downside is that the bike will be less stable on a long fast sweeper as every movement on the bars will have a bigger result. I previously did changes when I first got my 1199S and a 5 mm difference in ride height makes a difference. 10mm feels like you are on a different bike. I was very surprised at the differences small adjustments make. Depending on the rear shock brand, 1 turn of the ride height adjuster will alter ride height by 2 to 4 mm. A 4mm ride height adjustment will change trail by 1 mm. You will actually feel that. Every suspension book I have suggests strongly to record your start point with accurate to the millimetre measurements. Do one adjustment at a time and record it. Ride the bike and test. I personally found that after adjusting ride height front and rear, that I went back to stock OEM settings and spent more time adjusting compression and rebound dampening. I assume you have set the "Sag" on your bike. That is the start point. You adjust to your own requirements from there. If you ride Eastern Creek I assume you are local in Sydney. There are a few suspension adjusters that will set sag for you. Usually a 3 person job with you on the bike in your riding gear. (You can purchase ride height tools to do it yourself however the cost is more than getting someone to do it for you.) Your weight is what makes the difference. On exactly the same bike there will be small differences in "sag" for each rider. The bigger difference in weight will equal bigger differences in sag. It is a long post however it is not an easy answer in just a few words. Good luck with it. It is great fun reading, learning and then going out to test.