The yeast is going to take as long as it takes to ferment the beer, but you can control their environment to help them along.
Part of the reason you condition the beer is to let the yeast and other particles settle. Using finings such as Whirlfloc or Irish moss in the boil and gelatin post fermentation helps speed things up. A good rolling boil and quickly cooling your wort does as well. Another part of conditioning is carbonation. Keeping your bottles at warmer temperatures of 70F or above helps speed that up.
Then you also have the fermentation time. Aerate your wort well, pitch the proper amount of yeast, and keep your fermenting beer at the proper temperature for the yeast. This helps fermentation happen in a timely manner and prevent off flavors that would need to be conditioned out. Take gravity readings when you feel fermentation is complete. Stable readings over 2-3 days at your expected FG means its done. Sample those gravity readings to determine if the flavor is fine or if you would rather let it condition longer.
You can skip the secondary all together and leave it in the primary until its time to bottle. Once fermentation is done and you're happy with the flavor, you can cold crash, add gelatin, let it rest a couple days, then bottle.
Even with all of this, you're still looking at around 4-5 weeks, minimum. It's not a quick process.