I would double-check your break-in instructions with the dealer, but yeah....I would follow the manufacturers recommendations as well.
Diesel engines do not break in like gasoline engines. I followed the manual when I broke in my diesel engine after the rebuild. It was the opposite of what I would think to do....
I started out warming up the engine slowly....don't put any load on the engine till you have it to operating temps....no fast engine speed changes either, especially breaking in....be smooth and slow with the throttle.
Once I had mine to operating temps, I put the hardest load I knew how to put on the engine without trying to absolute kill it....brush-hogging. PTO speed....6ft tall grass, and close to 5 mph, varying the engine speed sometimes....it would pull the engine down sometimes almost 250 rpm's in dense patches...I didn't let it push any harder than that, but I kept it fully cranked out like that for close to 40 acres of grass - and plowing and discing till I hit the 50 hour mark.
When I would take a break or be done for the day, I would idle down slowly, still keeping the rpm's up in stages, letting the engine cool down slowly to help prevent any warping and keep things even. My book had me rechecking head bolt torque after so many hours.
Diesel's break in their rings completely different than gas engines, which is why it should be run so hard right out of the box....if you just run light loads on a diesel engine while breaking it in, you'll just varnish up your cylinders, and the rings won't seat properly. At least this was how it was explained to me by a diesel mechanic.
(I don't think my grandpa broke it in properly initially, and then he screwed up the 1st cylinder sleeve and ring install he did...which had bad results) I did a complete overhaul except the head one winter a few years ago....750 hours on that engine rebuild now and it sounds great and doesn't go through a drop of oil.