Turntable Platform - What do you place your TT on


I am in that stage of my analogue expedition where I find the weakest link in my vinyl chain is the platform on which my TT is placed. I currently use a simple coffee table like furniture to keep my TT on. My TT is a Nouvelle Platine Verdier and as I see it, it is quite sensitive to the platform it is placed on. I suppose most TTs are like that.

My TT was acquired only few months back and I do not have any rack space for it so I placed it on a wooden furniture near my system. The sound is slow and woolly :-(. I tried placing a TAOC sound creation board between the TT and the furniture, this improved the sound quite a bit but still the immediacy, springiness, transparency that this TT can do is not yet there. I then tried inserting a Finite Element ceraball and that really got things going. Great transparency, speed and immediacy albeit at the cost of lean, hard tones.

These small experiments leads me to believe that the platform for the turntable is extremely crucial to make it perform anywhere close to its potential. More crucial than cables and power conditioning IMO.

The questions that I am trying to answer is:
1. Is it a wrong approach to try variety of platforms on top of a coffee table ? Do I need to invest on a dedicated rack to sort this out ?

2. Can I solve this problem within a budget of $1k ?

The rest of my chain is:
1. RCM Sensor Prelude Phonostage
2. Naim CD5X + Flatcap2
3. Naim Nait 5i integrated
4. Tannoy Turnberry SE speakers

Thanks a lot for your advice.
pani
I use Vibra pods and cones, under a wood platform with TT on top. I too have my components on a wood table top. The floor is slab on grade with carpet. I have no issues with feedback, hum, etc.
I made a Cherry Covered MDF Plinth to match the base of my LP12 and have 3 Aurios imbedded in the bottom of the MDF core. This all sits atop a homemade cabinet. I have it braced to the wall to prevent rocking and this works pretty well, although I still can't do any Pet Townsend Air Guitar Windmill Jumps without the tonearm skipping.
Make a cheap mans Ginko Cloud. Just get a maple cutting board of an appropriate size. Then buy a bunch of squash balls on Amazon or at your local sports store (if they carry them). Place them judiciously with more under heavy parts of the shelf and less under lighter areas. They will flatten a bit over time and not roll around, like a racquetball would.

Woked like a charm for me.
You want mass under the TT. I have two of my TTs on a glass and steel TV stand, with a variety of bricks under and around them to stabilize the whole thing.
Even on a bouncy wood floor, yo can add a lot of mass tothe floor area around the base of the TT atand and it will mass load the floor so it does not bounce around anymore.
It will be at the limit of your budget, but I would recommend a very solid DIY shelf (concrete blocks/ maple shelf) and then a used passive Vibraplane for $1000. If you can find one, short of a Halcyonics or Minus K, there is no better isolation platform for an unsuspended turntable, IMO. You will be very surprised at the sonic improvement.