Yes, some tips, mainly from my father, over in England who has grown tomatoes for many years.(Indeterminate, climbing tomatoes)
Indeterminate means that you just don't know how tall the plant will grow, various factors will come into play ; soil condition, water, sunlight etc.
Plant the tomato in good, well drained, organic soil.
Tomatoes are one of the easiest seeds to grow successfully!
So go for it! I use the 'Little Nursery' featured here. It comes with a re usable seed tray. Simply add some seed compost, I like to sieve standard, organic compost and use the fine components, add a measure of sand, 2/3 of the sieved compost and a very small amount of blood and bone and some 'Vermiculite,' which helps add some room for the roots to grow. Many failures of seeds occur in soil that is too compacted, it seems.
Plant say 2-3 seeds per cell. Cover with a very light amount of mixture, then water with a sprayer. You can start the tray off in a plastic seedhouse. This can be suplemented with a small amount of water in the seed tray bottom. This 'capillary effect,' where the water is in the bottom of the tray, works well. You'll need to spray with sprayer on top, much less.
When the seedling is just 2-4 leaves, transplant into a small pot of compost, with stones on the bottom for drainage. Or, transplant straight into the garden bed. Add a 1.8 to 2 m stake if it is a climber, do this now and you won't interupt the root growth later on.
Trim off the lower 2 outer leaves when the seedling is a few weeks or so old. Water until the first flowers show. When the first set of flowers appear, start to feed. One teaspoon of fine potash (which contains Potassium) per plant, per 7 days. This will help set the flowers to fruit. Add the very fine potash powder to your watering can. If your soil/compost is good, tomatoes really don't need any more fertiliser except for the potash, save for a bit of calcium, which you can sprinkle and mix in the soil/compost you are going to backfill with. Calcium can be found in 'dolomite'. Over fertilising with nitrogen heavy compost will only serve to promote leaf growth, not fruit.
Tomatoes need regular watering but not too much. It depends on your soil. With good soil, it could be every second day or so, allowing it to dry out between. Less water seems to be needed when you are that final stage of ripening.
As the plant grows, trim off any branches that don't show flowers or fruit. Allow the tomato to concentrate it's efforts into the fruit or new flowers!
When the plant has 3,4 or 5! trusses of fruit, trim the top off to allow the plant to concentrate it's efforts into ripening the fruit/flowers you have. This will also allow the sun to help ripen the tomatoes directly!
At this stage, the tomato plant will look bare but will still have enough leaves for photosynthesis.
Watch the fruit ripen!