In the LED manufacturing process, while the variables like luminous flux and tint can be controlled to some extent, part of it is still random, and so manufacturers bin LEDs by those variables. Within each bin there's going to be some natural variation within the specific bin, this is true for any of the variables, flux bins are described as being between XXX and YYY lumens/350 mA (or some other current level), tint bins are described as being between four points on a CIE 1931 colour diagram. If there was no variation, flux would be bang on a single number, and tint would be described as being at a single point.
I'm going off memory here (which may very well be faulty), but I believe that what some people have noticed is that if you take 100, say, Cree XR-Es in a specific tint bin, and compare them to 100 SST-50s in a specific tint bin, there'll be a lot less variation in the tint of the SST-50s. I can't be bothered comparing the graphs, so I'm not sure whether it's just that Phlatlight have much tighter bins, or whether their manufacturing process is that much more consistent.
At least, that's what I've learnt.