In the last year or so, a number of new faq-proposed posts have been written, and have followed the guidelines in that tag's wiki for inclusion in faq. Some of them have made it, but most have not (including two by me and perhaps 3-5 others I think should really qualify).
What are the specific qualifications or signs of maturity that ♦ moderators use to determine which posts to promote?
- Post score? It seems that a number of the faq-proposed questions and answers have higher scores than even considerably older faq posts. A few have Great Question/Answer badges, or are close to them. A Q&A without at least Good Answer and probably Good Question too is not a great candidate for site FAQ, but that still leaves most of them in the running.
- Age since posting, or since last major edit? Nearly all of them have gone months at a stretch without significant changes. Some faq posts got the nod within hours of posting.
- Community involvement in editing? This one's tougher, but it seems like there are a number of faq-proposed answers that have had significant additions or adjustments from other editors, and some faq that have had nearly none.
- Community buy-in via linking and duplicating? Some in faq-proposed have upwards of 20 linked questions (the highest having 46 at present), which compares very favorably with the half-dozen or so several in faq have.
- Precise adherence to faq-proposed guidelines? Most of the posts meet all of them. But… you guessed it, certain faq posts aren't CW or don't link back to the index.
Barring something I didn't think of, this looks rather haphazard. Can we get a more consistent process so we don't have a bunch of posts lying around that are only nearly official FAQs? This shouldn't be terribly onerous. It would probably be sufficient to make a quick pass, once a month, through anything that's been modified in the last month to see if it's now up to par. (Where "par" is loosely defined as "basically meets the guidelines, nice uncontroversial score, some reasonable community buy-in".)
Occasionally, some posts might meet the basic qualifications but still be somewhat lacking in the subjective judgment of the moderators. Judgment calls are what we elect them for, but in that case it would be nice to have an explicit "try addressing XYZ so this can be in the FAQ" comment from the mod making the call. Limbo is to be avoided.