For flea-power SET amplifiers, you need high efficiency speakers to get loud enough, if you are a typical audiophile or attentive listener. Efficiency is usually rated in terms of sensitivity, in decibels at 1 meter distance and at the "voltage input to the speaker that would produce one watt if the impedance were equal to the rated impedance". That whole rigamarole just reflects the fact that speaker impedance fluctuates over a wide range as a function of frequency. Typical minimum sensitivity is 93dB for 8 watts (300B), 96dB for 4 watts (2A3), and 99dB for 2 watts (45, and the SEX amp). There are various considerations that put a +/-5dB range on all these numbers - listening preferences and room acoustics being the main ones.
I bring up the impedance issue because zero-feedback amps have a low damping factor (most SETs are in the range of 2 to 3), and an uneven impedance results in a frequency response that changes if the damping factor is low. This is the second important criterion for a suitable speaker. It is usually said that a relatively flat and smooth impedance across the frequency range marks a SET-friendly speaker. There are however a few speakers that may have an uneven impedance but are designed to work best with SETs. Impedance dips are usually more of a problem than impedance peaks, for what it's worth.
Back to efficiency - the biggest factor is that there are no dome tweeters which are high efficiency, and a large majority of commercially available speakers use dome tweeters. That leaves three options:
1) horn tweeters - classic Altec, JBL, and Klipsch designs are popular, as are the Pi speakers which fall into this category
2) exotic tweeters - some ribbons, pleated diaphragms, and the like - Doc B's high resolution system uses the Raal ribbon for example
3) "full-range" drivers, which have enough extended treble to do without tweeters - Fostex and Lowther are the big names here. Mostly these are no more than 8" diameter drivers, and they have limited excursion, so they usually need some help to make decent bass. Horn loading on the back of the diaphragm, and subwoofers for more conventional cabinets are the usual approaches.