I disagree - you shouldn't need a limiter just to achieve a normal mix without clipping. I prefer to get the mix as sweet as I can first and then see if I can improve it later with dynamics processing across the master bus - generally after stereo mix down.
I aim to keep my individual tracks at around -12dB and use per-track EQ cut to control constructive interference on the stereo bus peaking certain freqs - usually midrange.
When I first started mixing I thought each track should be around 0dB if possible and wondered why I was blowing out the master. I ended up limiting almost every track as well as the master.
Reducing track levels was the best mixing tip I ever learned - now I have so much headroom and scope for nice dynamics. -12db avg level per track is a good rule of thumb - the stereo bus then usually ends up around 0dB
I'm also a fan of manual levelling of dynamics (e.g. using V-Vocal to quickly raise lower levels of certain phrases) particularly on tracks with high dynamic fluctuations like vocals. Once you've levelled off manually, your compressor is much more likely to sound sweet than if it has to work with big fluctuations.
Boost 11 works great on individual tracks too. Same principle though - use it to improve something, not to fix something that is otherwise unusable.