Yup, bilge pumps on dry boats are for buying you time so you can find the burst hose, failed seacock, punctured diaphragm, broken rudder tube or popped out transducer. And help you locate the source of ingress, because once the water is high enough you will no longer see where it comes in.
On ours everything except the under-engine section was limberholed into the lowest spot, where the intake strainer for a manual bilge pump and an automatic bilge pump were located. Oh, and the V-berth was separate, which is because it acts as a partial crash bulkhead (somewhat compromised by wire holes going through at mid-level). Useful, because that's where the fragile transducers were.
So bilge pumps go into the lowest spot, somewhere in the center of the boat. We also had a roving high capacity pump with a long hose and cable. Also handy for pumping out other peoples boats if you end up needing to assist someone.