I didn't like the Lee presses at all. I found they felt sloppy. I'm German, so I like everything tight and smooth. (Insert joke about girls here) I liked the Lyman turret press much better as it felt more precise. Sometimes, the kit is nice to have, but you wind up getting rid of a bunch of stuff in it like I did.
Digital scales are good. Make sure to check them periodically with the check weights. I find a balance beam scale to be a PITA, esp the cheaper ones. The groves in the balance weights don't seem to line up with the numbers very well, so you wind up having to count stuff off. That drives my German personality nuts. lol
I didn't like the Lymann case trimmer that came with my kit. It was making horribly inaccurate lengths of cases, so I sold it, and got lee trimmer pilots and a cutter that I chuck up in my lathe. Works like a dream really. I can do over 100 cases in an hour while feeling quite relaxed, and not having extra blisters on my hands.

All my current rifles are bolt actions. I can get a lot more times of firing a case if I use a lee collett neck sizing die till the case becomes hard feeding, then I full length resize. I do like lee dies. This however is not to be done in semi or full autos, pumps, levers, etc. And just from my experience, buy the separate crimp die. Do not use the roll crimp feature in the seating die. PITA to set.
Get a loading block. the thing that you set the cases in to fill them, etc. Always check to see if powder is in the case before seating the bullet. Get a bullet pullet. An inertia type one works well for me. A set of digital calipers is handy, and almost any type that will measure 6" will work. Make sure you have a set of case neck brushes. I use nitro solvent and a cheap set of steel brushes to do the outside of the case neck, and a case neck brush with a bit of nitro solvent to clean the inside of the neck. I let the nitro solvent on my hands be the case lubricant. Then I size the case, and after, I Use a q-tip with rubbing alcohol to clean out the inside of the case neck and a piece of scrap cloth with the same to clean the outside of the case. Also, a blade screwdriver that's slightly smaller than the primer pocket is used to clean out the crud after depriming.
Once you get used to the routine of doing the case prep, you can watch tv while doing it.

Never do your reloading while distracted though... Good way to make a mistake.
Also, most die sets don't come with a shellholder, but there are only 11 different shellholder sizes that I'm aware of. A set of all the different shellholder sizes can be bought cheaply enough.
Hope this helps.