Base SI units are, conventionally
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html
length, mass, time, thermodynamic temperature, current, amount of substance, and luminosity.
Temperature can be eliminated by realising that by making Boltzman's constant equal to 1, temperature is equivalent to energy.
Time can be eliminated by setting c=1, and using units of distance
Mass can be eliminated by setting G/c^2=1, usually done after setting c=1, and using units of distance to replace units of mass.
Current is charge/second, and charge can be eliminated by setting the permittivity of free space to 1, as in cgs units.
Amount of substance (mole) is just a constant number
Luminosity (candella) I don't use much, but with all of the above it can be eliminated as well.
This leaves one "base" unit, the scale factor of space-time, the cm. This system of units, with one base fundamental unit of distance (the cm) is commonly known as "geometric" units.
The single base unit in geometric units can be eliminated by setting the value of Planck's constant equal to 1.
This leaves no fundamental units - so called "Planck" units.
I would suggest sticking with the SI units for general communications, but in working problems in GR I find geometric units very useful.
If I did more quantum mechanics, I'd make a different choice.
People doing a lot of theoretical E&M often use one of the cgs unit variants with permittivity set to 1 and a few other tweaks.
About the only people who use pure Planck units are people who need both quantum mechanics and gravity, i.e. people into quantum gravity.
In conclusion, there are a lot of different possible choices for units, the standard recommended choice for ease of communication is the SI units. These are defined and designed to be portable and easy for everyone to understand, different fields tend to have different convenient alternate choices that usually must be learned by anyone in that specific field.