You're in a weird state: You have a lot of questions, but not a lot of votes, and that means that you're more likely to trend 'negatively' than positively. Here are some stats:
- You have 65 questions.
- 5 are deleted, and negative or zero-scored (Negative: 1, 2, Zero: 3, 4, 5)
You have 7 closed questions: ( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7) (some of those are deleted; so this won't add up to your total.
Only 12 are positively scored. Total: (15 points)
- 5 are negatively scored. Total: (-12 points)
Now that I've gotten the stats out of the way, here are some general thoughts after looking through your questions:
Your titles aren't very descriptive. Adjectives like "Nightmare", "Problem" or "Mystery" (Used 3 times), or Quandary (used twice), Issue aren't things that a user would search for on Google.
Your titles should reflect what you'd search for on Google. If you don't know enough about your problem to know what to search for, you're already entering territory where you probably don't know enough to write a well-received question.
The questions don't always give the information needed to solve them.
No one cares about your politeness. If you want to 'assimilate' into the culture and have your questions better received, learn the culture's norms. Here, we dislike salutations and gratitude in questions or answers. They're superfluous. We know you're grateful because we'd be grateful if someone solved our problem. Show it with votes, not words.
Questions should be concise; well-written; convey the information needed to solve the issue; and not ask open-ended things.
Lest you think I'm beating you up -- I'm not. You have asked some very nice questions, but for the most part, it seems like Stack Overflow is the first place you go before research, before sitting down and doing some critical thinking, and before trying to reproduce the issue outside of your environment.
You're already doing better than a lot of people who get your warning: You've gotten to 65 questions before it happening. That's a good thing. We see a lot that happen after just two or three questions.
To summarize:
- Stick to the facts.
- Don't use colorful adjectives
- Make your titles what you'd search in Google for
- Keep the questions concise
- Make the actual question you're asking something not open ended. "How to I frob the widget" as opposed to "What am I doing wrong?"
- Remember: We don't care about politeness -- and you will even seem like 'in the crowd' if you don't use them.
- Comment regularly on answers and on your questions right after you post them -- those magical 5 minutes are the time when the most people will see your question
- Don't get discouraged
- Try to improve your older questions and your deleted questions.
the warnings are automatic and determined by an algorithm, there is no committee or individual responsible.
That is, the not-well-received questions are the ones you were downvoted on.