Reducing movement is a tricky business. Here are three technical points:
1) If the device you are addressing is the source of movement (speakers, for instance) then increasing their mass will reduce their displacement, at least at frequencies low enough that the whole moves as a rigid single entity. A massive support and/or platform, tightly coupled to the device, works this way. It does not change the energy, but a larger mass moves a smaller distance for the same energy.
2) Isolation does not reduce movement, it just keeps it confined to one place. In the case of a speaker, isolation keeps the cabinet's vibrations out of the floor, so the floor does not radiate sound. In the case of a microphonic preamp, isolation keeps the floor's movement out of the preamp so it doesn't ring.
=== notice the tricky bit here with speakers. Spikes will increase the cabinet's mass but will couple the cabinet's vibrations into the floor. Which is better? Kind of depends on the floor! ===
3) Isolation is not absorption. A pure-spring support reduces the motion (above its resonance) even if it bounces forever once set in motion. If it absorbs energy (damps the bounce so it dies quickly) it provides less isolation at all frequencies. It's a tradeoff. Car shock absorbers are a familiar example.