Yes - definitely. The faq tag should not be applied to a post until it had been sufficiently cleaned up. By sufficiently, I mean:
There's ideally one answer that contains all of the information someone reading the question would want to know. We don't want information competing for precedence on these pages sorted by votes.
There are, at most few comments on either the question or answer. By the time the tag is applied, anything of value should have been moved into the post.
The answer should document a clear consensus.
If other FAQ entries cover some of the same ground, they should be linked in context to avoid "sure, you read that one, but did you read the other one?"
The question should obviously be tagged appropriately, apart from faq
Everything else that needs to happen (wiki status, FAQ index link, etc)
Until the above is complete, the post should be tagged as faq-proposed. We don't want to apply the official tag until we're sure that someone who knows nothing about the topic can walk away informed.
In an ideal world, users just getting familiar with how Stack Exchange sites work should generally not need to visit the meta FAQ very often, I believe the eventual goal is providing just in time help for most things that people find a little confusing at first. There's a ton of great information here on Meta, but finding and digesting it can be a little overwhelming.
The more succinct and polished these entries are, the better. Revisiting and curating these from time to time is also needed, basically to make sure the most current information is reflected in each answer and any unnecessary noise is removed.