Yes Haltek, we know what the solder balls are for

Based on quite a few conversations, when people are starting out on monoliths, I have seen a common pathway from beginner to accomplished as:
1. Everything wrong, continually tries with wrong setup - fail or very poor results
2. Decide must need thinner wire - small progress
3. Decide need Microscope - small progress
3. Decide need finer tip - small progress
4. Try wire glue - fail
5. Decide must need a way to put less solder directly on the pad, think of solder ball - fail
6. Decide to use some sort of Flux - small progress
7. Decide need better solder - small progress
8. Now things are coming together, and small tweaks to all the above are possible now as the subject has experience and practice and can figure out improvements.
I agree with everything Haltek says.
One thing that a salesman at an electronics store told me when I was buying solder and flux, after I was showing him what I was soldering to.. he said be careful how aggressive the flux is. if the flux is too aggressive, it can eat a bit off the surface of the pad. if the pads are really thin, or the traces are it can eat through, or make it thin so the electrical conductivity is compromised, or heating it will lift the trace/pad from the PCB. I haven't seen it happen, but thought I'd mention it.
Once you have tweaked the above, the only other thing I will say is to solder wires in order of your natural hand direction, not order of your pinout sheet.. and make sure the wires are in the correct place, not touching so after you finish you don't have to move them to separate them.
you wouldn't think it until you have experienced soldering monoliths, but there is a lot to say on this subject even though it seems like a simple operation.