In the days and weeks before a moderator election, the community applies great scrutiny to all candidates. They need to jump through a series of hoops, answer hard questions in the town hall meetings, and have to convince the audience of their good character and judgement - almost like in a real-world election for a seat on the city council, or a judge's post!
After the election, however, we seem to forget about them unless they do something scandalous. In general, that is a good thing and by design - the basis of Stack Overflow's moderation is being an invisible hand in the background, so most of the moderators' activity will go unnoticed.
Still - once they quit the post, there is not much left to thank them for their service. For example, Gumbo and SLaks withdrew from the post before last election, and received little in terms of thanks from the community. That's not meant as criticism - I, too, read the post, and somehow didn't feel like adding my thanks, either - for whatever reason, I don't really remember, it somehow didn't feel fitting. But it is a little bit unceremonious and not really reflecting the work they put in to keep the sites clean - and I'm sure being a mod is much, much more like work than it is to just be a power user. As a mod, you are expected to show up frequently, and process some amount of flags.
I think after a year of service with a good track record, moderators should get something nice and special. Inviting every mod to New York City would probably break the company's budget twice, but there are smaller ideas that might also be nice:
At the very least, a gold badge.
Some official confirmation in the profile of being an ex-moderator for CV purposes (if desired)
A donation from SO, Inc. at year's end to a registered charity of the moderator's choice, in the name of the moderator(Edit: As pointed out by Michael Mrozek, moderators already get to decide which charities SE's annual donations go to.)A programming-related perk (no money) bought wholesale by SO, like a subscription to a magazine, paid video training, a book of their choice from a publisher's range, access to stuff like those paid MSDN thingies...
A special piece of swag reserved for moderators (and bound to fetch a fortune on EBay in ten years ;)
What do people think? Am I alone in seeing things this way? I'm not a moderator so I don't know for sure of course, and I've never heard anybody complain. I'm just thinking there could be a bit more recognition.
It goes without saying that additional ideas are welcome.


"I'm sure being a mod is much, much more like work than it is to just be a power user."~1.63k flags/day, between 12 moderators on SO. You do the math. – NullUserException อ_อ♦ Dec 9 '11 at 21:45