If re-flagging is not the answer, does/should it stop there?
You can always leave a comment to the OP. In fact, you should do that before flagging in most cases.
Should we provide the flagger with more information, similar to how questions are closed? For example,
If you go to your flag summary page on your profile page, you'll see moderator responses to your flags:
Does a declined flag without explanation discourage future flagging...if so, does it matter?
You always get a response if your flag is declined. Again, see your profile summary page.
There are two issues at play:
In your example, you flagged an answer wrongly. There are five specific flags on answers:
- This answer is effectively an advertisement with no disclosure. It is not useful or relevant, but promotional.
Spam: The old fashioned viagra toting, you've won a million dollars from an exiled prince in Nigeria sort of spam.
- it is offensive, abusive, or hate speech
Would a reasonable person find the content of this answer to be offensive, abusive, or hate speech?
The Poster forgot what the box was for. They used it instead to try to post a new question, a comment on another post, or they wanted to tell us they liked bananas. I like bananas too.
Wall of Garbage. No reasonable amount of editing will help it. It just needs to be deleted. By a Moderator. Now.
- other (needs ♦ moderator attention)
Tell us what's wrong with the post, why it's wrong, and what we should do about it. Concisely.
In your case, you flagged it as "very low quality". It is not a "Wall of garbage", and all it needs to be more awesome is a brief description of how the answer better fits the problem presented. It could stand on its own (though I'd downvote it for lacking completeness), but there's nothing about it that is very low quality.
The second issue is that there's an expectation that by the time you get to the point where you're flagging things, you know what you're doing. You've been around the community, you've seen good and bad posts, and you understand the reasons to flag.
If you don't understand the reasons to flag: Don't flag. Or, if you really feel like something is off but you're not sure what, flag with a reason of "Other" and let us know what, why, and what we should do.
The onus is on the flagger to understand what the descriptions of the flags mean. We've talked at length about each of these on meta, and the flags have evolved to give the greatest understanding in the fewest amount of words.
If you've got a specific suggestion on how to improve it, we're all ears; however, outside of the years of hammering out we've done to make the flag reasons clear, there's not much else we can do.
If a moderator chooses to, they can leave a custom response to a flag (either decline or helpful). Normally we do not do this; The stock responses cover 90% of all cases. For the other 10%, we'll leave a custom declination response.
Yours was easy; the answer wasn't "Very low quality", so the moderator found no evidence to support your assertion.
very low quality
, nothing does.