Tags are not created in a void. Tags are created by adding them to questions that need those tags. And ideally this should not be just a single question. We have some very diligent members in our community who will clean up tags that don't seem to add value. So the process would be the following:
Inform your users that they can ask questions on Stack Overflow and that some of you will keep an eye out for them. Please do point them to the Help Center when they are unfamiliar with Stack Overflow. What is a suitable question for your mailing list might not be suitable for Stack Overflow. And you don't want to end up with a bunch of disappointed users because their questions got downvoted or closed. (It might even be wise not to abandon your mailing list, should you be thinking of doing so)
When you see that one or more questions have been asked, if a member of your community has sufficient reputation, they can add a tag themselves. If that doesn't happen, list the particular questions on Meta and a member of the community can add a tag.
Once a tag has been created, fill out the tag wiki and tag wiki excerpt with information about the tag, following our guidelines. This helps where it comes to the community deciding whether or not the tag should stay.
If you are inclined to make up question and answer pairs just to get some content started, please don't. In my experience seeding your tag with such content is often not appreciated if the content isn't particularly good or seems contrived just to get tags going. Make sure you ask actual questions about actual problems you're facing. But that's just a word of personal advice.
lbjava
? That might be allowable if it's a tool you're using or developing. A tag for your specific group (illinois-nlp
) would be a meta tag though, so it would be edited out of any questions where it was added.