1) Easyoptouts to get a lot done easily. According to Consumer Reports, they were the second most effective (by a small margin), but they don't ask for a lot of your data up front and don't give it out to brokers who don't already have it when trying to get your data removed. (There's also one or two places they will send you to where their scripts can't delist you that you'll have to do manually -- do those.) Optery edged therm out slightly but seemed to share your data with brokers in the process of delisting you. However, Optery has a free tier that will let you see how badly you are being exploited by data brokers before you sign up for a paid plan.
https://www.consumerreports.org/electronics/personal-information/services-that-delete-data-from-people-search-sites-review-a2705843415/
2) Then use Google's personal delisting tool (doesn't actually remove your data but it removes Google's index of it so it's harder to find). Google does require you to provide personal information most of us won't want to give them. But, they clearly claim this data is only used for your data removal, and they are are a big company -- the lawsuits would destroy them if they abused this provided data, so I tend to believe them.
https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/12719076?hl=en
3) Wait until Easyoptouts completes their first delisting cycle (2 weeks) then work your way down this prioritized list to catch things Easyoptouts missed:
https://github.com/yaelwrites/Big-Ass-Data-Broker-Opt-Out-List
N.B. I second Grouchy Grape's point about unintended inconveniences: I tried to get a credit card, but the bank couldn't verify me. Still, it's worth it to me.