1. Replace wall switch with a "CFL friendly" wall switch such as a WS13A. You need a neutral wire in your wall switch box for the WS13A to work.
2. If multiple fixtures (or sockets) are controlled by one WS467, leave one incandescent bulb in one of the fixtures and put CFLs in the rest.
3. Replace wall switch with standard switch and use Socket Rockets (which play nice with CFLs) in the fixtures.
and
4. (At your own risk) Depending upon room in your fixture, kluge a 7W night light in the fixture along with the CFL. I have an outdoor fixture large enough to put one of these jewels in,
http://www.acehardware.com/product/index.jsp?productId=1294319 and plug a night light into the adaptor's receptacle. The night light shunts enough current through the wall switch that it works reliably. It won't work well if your wall switch is the newer soft start module which has the "Resume Dim" feature. When using the local control button, the "Resume Dim" switch can be accidentally programmed to come on at levels less than 100% which the CFL does not like. Also If you have home automation control such as AHP, identify the wall switch as a Socket Rocket or Appliance Module so the software will not think the module is dimable.