Or...
Clip your meter's black lead to the chassis or ground point of your choosing. Use the red probe, set to measure voltage, to lightly touch each plate/grid with the amp on, turned up and with a speaker load.
Start near the output of the amp; phase inverter should work fine. If you probe the phase inverter plates, you will hear a slight pop through the speaker. When you move "backwards" through the circuit to the phase inverter grids, the pop will be somewhat louder. That's due to the gain of the phase inverter.
Keep stepping backwards through the circuit, probing plate then grid of each preceeding stage, until you find the point you don't get a "pop." You will have found at least one wiring error location.
For example:
12AX7 #2 in your amp - probing the plate (pin 1) gives a pop, probing the grid (pin 2) gives a louder pop.
12AX7 #1 - you probe pin 6 (second stage plate), you get no pop.
- Between 12AX7 #1, pin 6 and 12AX7 #2, pin 2 there is a coupling cap, the volume control and a 1M resistor/500pF cap. There must, therefore, be a wiring error, poor solder joint, or shorting of the signal in/around those components between the two tubes.
If you were doing this in conjunction with measuring your amp's tube voltages, you'd also look to see evidence of cathode circuit wiring errors/opens, such as one triode's cathode being 0v (or very close) and its plate being at B+. That would indicate no current through the triode, and an open circuit between the tube cathode and cathode resistor, or cathode resistor and ground.