You'll get lots of ideas on this but if it were me I'd consider a Scheu Cello the next step up, at around the $1K mark for the TT and then either a Rega or the Scheu Classic arm. Cart could be a Denon 103 if you have a MC phono stage.
If you want to skip that stage and go to the next step after that, the Scheu Premier is what I own at the moment and I am very fond of it.
Your phono stage and preamp questions are good to keep in mind but there is no single right answer. As a general rule on upgrades, I spend as much as I can afford on a single item then save for the next, in this order: turntable, arm, cartridge, phonostage, preamp, amp, speakers. If I've already done the first, I do the second one next, and so forth.
If you can consider the phonostage and preamp separately, buy them separately and spend a bit more on each to get the best possible sound.
As for sonic benefit, the reason many people upgrade is not that they are delighted with their sound. Instead there is usually something they don't like. They then try to improve that point by replacing components with better ones. Once they have got something that satisfies them, they stop upgrading, at least until they hear a much better system.
Try to identify what aspect of your sound you would like to improve. Then look for an opportunity to listen to better systems and see if they have solved that problem.
If you want to skip that stage and go to the next step after that, the Scheu Premier is what I own at the moment and I am very fond of it.
Your phono stage and preamp questions are good to keep in mind but there is no single right answer. As a general rule on upgrades, I spend as much as I can afford on a single item then save for the next, in this order: turntable, arm, cartridge, phonostage, preamp, amp, speakers. If I've already done the first, I do the second one next, and so forth.
If you can consider the phonostage and preamp separately, buy them separately and spend a bit more on each to get the best possible sound.
As for sonic benefit, the reason many people upgrade is not that they are delighted with their sound. Instead there is usually something they don't like. They then try to improve that point by replacing components with better ones. Once they have got something that satisfies them, they stop upgrading, at least until they hear a much better system.
Try to identify what aspect of your sound you would like to improve. Then look for an opportunity to listen to better systems and see if they have solved that problem.