It also has to do with whether or not you actually use the volume control. I have seen guitar players only use the volume control to turn their guitar off.
You can experiment with different values and resistor and resistors with caps in parallel over the tabs on the pot. There's a lot of tone to be squeezed out. I never realized it until I started building my own designs. I either used an LP or an ES335 or for a short time strats. I never mixed and matched pickups like I have over the last 10 years. That's when I found out how the volume control and tone control can dictate so much change in tone. Were it's hooked up and what values can make drastic changes in how the guitar sounds. Unless you use a wall of 100 watt Marshalls....

I also have noticed that with the tone controls, especially on my slide guitars, I use the tone control to take off some highs to get rid of some of that squeak from the slide and strings when I miss a finger mute. I found out that were the tone control is affects the output of the guitar. Also not only whether you attenuate the highs, even what frequency you are attenuating. Adding that resistor and cap in conjunction with the tone control setup can make for some interesting guitar tones.
The 250K pot should be fine.
I also use some of those stacked pots in my guitars so I can add more knobs without cutting holes in my bodies.