There seems to be a communication problem here. So: Level your saddle, then move it back until you can take your hands off the bars like the guy in the photo or at least almost being able to do this. Move it back as far as it takes. AFTER your butt is moved back so you're well balanced, then apply the heel-on-pedal measuring technique to establish saddle height, leaving the saddle in the fore-and-aft position you have already established. After that, recheck for balance. Then worry about saddle tilt. Changing saddle tilt may or may not affect saddle height. Check with the heel-on-pedal measurement technique to see.
Here's a simple list of how-to-do-it, in order::
How can I fitting my bike
After you've done all this, check to see where your seatpost clamp is on your saddle rails. If it's very far from the center of the rails, you'll need a setback seatpost to avoid possibly breaking a rail sometime down the road. If your seatpost already has setback, you may need one with more.
Ignore any measurements other than those taken with your body. IOW ignore KOPS and saddle position vs. BB. You adjust your bike to fit you.