I'd disagree with that. Think about it this way. It's night time. Look up at the moon. Now move eight feet to the east. Your view to the moon hasn't changed. One might argue in the instance of moving yourself eight feet a tree or building might obscure your view after moving but in the case of Japan the whole island moved, trees and all.
The average sat is 35000 to 45000 kilometers away from you. Moving a mount eight feet in any direction isn't going to make a difference that anyone would see. This excludes of course line of sight issues or avoiding sources of TI.
I've got a couple of friends that were adamant that a dish had to be on a roof to work. I just explained to them that the extra 10, 20, etc., feet in the air makes no difference in receiving signals from that far away. For the same reason dishes do not have to be on a roof to work.
The closer the targeted object is to the viewer the more likely the aim would need to be changed. But at geostationary positions around the equator the distances are so great that it's not worth even looking at tweaking.
Sure, if the mount is no longer plumb or the dish azimuth has changed it will need to be fixed.