I did this with wood landscape timbers at 10' spacing and a woven wire fence with graduated vertical wire spacing. Keep the narrow slats at the bottom.
That being said, you will need a pto powered post hole digger, a shovel, a tamper, fence staples, a fence pliers, a fence stretcher, gates, a drill to install gate hinge pins and some brace wire. I took a roll of string, set it in loops to produce the 10' spacing, spray painted the multiple loops, then strung it around the property. I sprayed the ground where the paint marks were. Then drilled all the holes at once. Poles set, wire started, stretched, stapled and braced.
It may take you a day to run 1 roll of wire (330'), but the next day after you will do twice as much by working smarter. Then you will finish the 10 acres on the 4th day. Plan out your gate locations and set them first. For dogs, you need to run the wire close to the ground. Otherwise they may try to crawl or dig under it. For horses, I set the wire about 6" off the ground so they wouldn't get their hooves caught in it. Deer will jump this type of fence with ease.
I would not recommend setting posts in gravel, concrete or worry about exact post spacing. The dogs, horses and deer will not complain about this, and the extra work is cost in time and material. Don't splice the wire ends together. Just overlap at the closest post. Plan a head so that Martha Stuart doesn't notice. The treated landscape timbers are cheaper if you buy by the pallet, so plan ahead. Use Google Earth to measure the fence perimeter length. Its pretty accurate. I use a pipe attached to my loader bucket to carry the roll of wire while its being unrolled. That's the only troublesome task as far as I'm concerned. Have done 25 acres this way over the years.