There are lots of different methods, though most depend on the design of the suspension, for example some the nut is above the lower wishbone as in the video , but some below hence some suggestions will not work, which is why it is best to understand the operation and how the load is supported on the vehicle you are working on.
As a slightly different example when working as a foreman at a garage a member of staff failed an Mot on a Morris 1000 on brakes and quite rightly so.
I chose to do the job on another ramp and whilst working on it I noticed extreme wear on the bottom trunnion/kingpin threaded assembly (quite a common fault) I told the staff member who had originally tested it and he said he would check it when retesting brakes, which he did saying he could find nothing wrong with it!
I went over and looked at it and bearing in mind this was several years ago and "PC" had not been invented, I took one look and said "you have jacked it up in the wrong place you stupid **** ". I then jacked it up correctly and told him to check again and it became obvious to him what I meant.
Later when the part was stripped down the wear was so bad it could easily have collapsed on the road and he would have passed an MOT on it!
Bare in mind this man was older than me and his family had owned garages and felt he should have been made foreman, but the boss thankfully realised differently.
The point being, on that model of vehicle it had torsion bar suspension which if jacked up on the chassis rails had the affect of taking all the slack out of a worn joint, where as it should have been jacked up under the outer end of the lower suspension arm so the torsion bar would not come into play.