This is exactly what Binky points do, except that instead of taking just the one North hand in your example, it was based on over 700,000 hands. Additionally, you don't want an evaluation method that is best opposite an "average hand", you want one that is weighted over all the hands that partner can have. Binky takes the evaluation method that is best simultaneously for both players instead of just one. Binky and other double-dummy evaluators can give some insight into competitive bidding as well. Based on your own hand, you can make some estimations about how many tricks the opponents can take as well. Not as accurate as our own tricks, but still... You can generate a sort of "total tricks" estimate and use that for preemptive or competitive bidding. So if you have a shapely hand, you may not have that many "points" but you see that you have no defense and can bid it up.