Its a Ford manual, but get hold of Burton Powers parts catalogue wchich contains an engine building guide telling you lots about this sort of thing.
The first few minutes of running with new cams and followers (new in the sense that they haven't been used together before, regardless of whether they are actually new) are absolutely crucial - this is when initial scuffing defines the wearing surfaces (ie the cam and follower wear to 'fit' together), and will make a huge difference on wear rate in the future.
Maximum oil pressure for at least a few minutes at first start up is vital - this ensures plenty of lubrication coming to the wearing surfaces, and makes sure the lifters pressurise up and get rid of any clearances as quickly as possible. Most manuals specify 2-3 mins @ 2-3k revs is VITAL on startup.
Zinc based, thick cam lube is normally supplied with new cams, but try Kent or Piper for a bottle, and should be used to coat the cam lobes and bearings before installation. Its ok for this stuff to be in your system even though its thick and smells like an alsation thats been drinking gearbox oil. You'll be doing an oil change after a couple of hundred miles anyway...
I started a vauxhall 8v engine with dry lifters after full rebuild and the noise was horrendous, another 8 valves and I should think that accounts for the noise being loud.
Have you got this started and sorted now? I've gotta do a top end rebuild on my new golf, so would be interesting to know how it went in the end.