i use a method similar to Stu, except on my Hornady LNL
since i have a case feeder setup, it makes "single step" progressive processing pretty efficient.
i weigh my brass out in 5lb lots. My wet tumbler is rated for 12 lbs. it has 5 lbs of pins and uses 1 qt (2lbs) of water so that leaves me 5 lb batches of brass. I keep them bagged that way until full prep is done and have a little cheat-sheet i put in each bag so that i know where in the processing steps that batch currently sits. i print them on 10 per sheet avery label templates on regular paper. If anyone would like a copy , pleas feel free to PM me and i'll get you a PDF copy of it
initially i do a quick dry tumble to remove rough debris from my cases. this is just to make sure there's no gunk to get hung up in the case feeder system, shell plate, etc. i'm talking like 15 mins in walnut.
first pass thru press - i run the universal decapper only in stage one. other 4 ports are left open.
do a proper wet tumble to fully clean my brass (including the primer pockets) then lube the cases with a liberal ammount of One Shot
2nd pass thru press - sizing die in stage 1 - other 4 ports left open.
then i trim/chamfer/deburr with the Lee Quick Trim system on my single stage with a drill driving the trimmer. Roughly 4 seconds of spin per case with 223 -ish sized cases, around 6-8 seconds for 308 sized cases. you can do 400-500 cases/hr this way easily once you get into a good rhythm.
like stu - it then gets marked as fully prepped and ready to load for some point in the future.
most of my priming for rifle cases is done on my CPS lite on the single stage. I like being able to visually inspect each case for proper primer insertion (sometimes the vibratory primer stackers flip one over on you, etc) or to make sure one didnt not feed before it makes a powdery mess all over my press.
the other nice thing about this is its a final QC inspection point to look for things that might have been missed in the other stages of processing. Just an example i was priming some 223 brass a couple weeks back to load and found one that had a hairline crack about a half inch long down the body of the case.
then onto to the progressive for final loading
stage 1 - empty
stage 2 - powder
stage 3 - powder cop
stage 4 - seating die (no crimp applied)
stage 5 - crimp die (if applicable)
i try to make large runs, especailly on the brass prep side, but equally on the loading side, so that i'm not doing full caliber changes all the time.
its probably 45 mins or so to do a full caliber changeover (adjusting the powder thrower, changing the case feed system, primer feed system, etc) you just need to have enough brass on hand so that you can shoot quite a while before you need to process again. THats usually my winter time part of this hobby - the brass prep.
HTH!