Before starting the bleeding process, fill the filter with fuel and reinstall loosely. Use the hand primer and watch the bubbles come out around the top of the filter. Once the bubbles change to a steady fuel flow, tighten down the filter. Then open the compression nuts on all four hardlines where they come out of the injection pump. Use the primer pump again - till bubbles start coming out. Continue pumping till you get more fuel than bubbles. Tighten the compression nuts. Follow the hardlines up to the fuel injectors, and loosen the compression nuts up there. Open the compression release and crank the engine, watching for bubbles - and eventually fuel flow. Stop cranking, tighten the compression nuts. Start engine.
Wouldn't hurt to clean the sediment bowl and any banjo screens while you're at it. Don't forget to tighten the primer pump back down when you're finished.
I personally have better luck loosening the compression nuts all the way so that the hardlines physically come off. I can get a better look at the bubbles and fuel flow that way. But everybody develops their own bleeding technique after while, so will you.
//greg//