Is it possible to show alert (on top, like the alerts for new badges for example) for users with 0% accept rate when they log in, with text like "Please improve your accept rate" and link to page explaining how and why?

From what I see, the points are the economy of SO sites so people who ask, get answer, and don't accept (on regular basis) are like people buying something without paying - and they should somehow be notified this is the situation.

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@Bill (hope you will get notified for this comment?) - I don't think that even with such feature implemented users will stop posting such comments. It's the human nature. :/ – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Jun 27 '12 at 13:35
You're probably right. I doubt it will stop, but I would like to slow it down if we can. Having this feature implemented will at least give me something to link back to when I ask people to stop leaving those comments. – Bill the Lizard Jun 27 '12 at 13:37
I also placed a bounty on Let's stop displaying a user's accept rate. – Bill the Lizard Jun 27 '12 at 13:40
@Bill yep noticed that - personally I am against hiding it altogether but can see your point. :) – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Jun 27 '12 at 13:49
@BilltheLizard Wow, a bounty ending in 16 minutes. That's cutting it rather close. – Mr Lister Jul 4 '12 at 13:14
It would be ironic if the user that asked this question had a low acceptance rate! – HDave Nov 9 '12 at 21:47
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@HDave here in Meta it's different, it's rare to see high accept rate. Open discussion or feature requests often can't really have accepted answer. :) – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Nov 10 '12 at 10:37

3 Answers

I second that, but I would make that multiple warnings:

  • You get your first warning (the next time you log in) after asking 5 questions without accepting one

  • You get your second warning after asking 10 questions with an accept rate of less then 50%

  • And at some point (e.g. 20 questions with 0% rate or 50 questions with less than 30% rate, just to make up some numbers) you are no longer allowed to post questions unless you reach the specified threshold.

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Good suggestion except for the last part.. I won't block anyone from posting here, maybe just show "permanent alert" that can't be turned off. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Dec 2 '10 at 12:34
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permanent alert is fine with me too – Sean Patrick Floyd Dec 2 '10 at 14:00
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And related: it's not stupid-obvious to some HOW to accept an answer. Consider including a graphic/icon/arrow ('click the checkmark') in the proposed warnings. – payne Feb 28 '11 at 14:29
@payne: If it is in the permanent alert, yes. That'll keep it out of the way of most folks. – Donal Fellows May 11 '11 at 8:11
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Along the lines of how it's not stupid-obvious on how to accept an answer, perhaps we could leave a pop-up message when you're viewing your own question with unaccepted answers? Something along the lines of the pop-up that appears when you downvote something wouldn't mess with the design layout too much, I think. – Yawus Jun 27 '12 at 16:17
IIRC it does so already. – Marijn Jun 28 '12 at 11:59

Great idea, but I don't think that putting this as a banner at the top is the most effective way of doing this.

How about instead havig this as they post a new question? (something like a big orange box right next to the "Post your question" button).

This is the time that users are most likely to do something about it, because it affects how likely they are to get their question answered (and how much they are going to get hassled by the "low accept rate" police)

I'm not so convinced by the "stop them asking questions if they accept rate is low" argument - its good that users credit people when an answer is helpful but its not the end of the world if they don't. Besides, presumably the accept rate is taken into account by the anti-vampire question block thingy.

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Fine with me as well. As long as the person see it and it links to explanation it's all good. :) – Sha Wiz Dow Ard May 11 '11 at 6:32

Agreed, but there are several "severity levels" which should be taken into account:

  1. If the OP has up-voted answers without accepting any of them, those are obvious candidates for accepting. The alert could contain a link to one such question. This is probably a simple case of ignorance of the "Accept" feature.
  2. If other people have up-voted one or more answers, those are good candidates, but for whatever reason it might be that such answers are not applicable to the OP's situation. Users might be put off if the alert reads like a critique of their judgment.
  3. If nobody has up-voted any answer, then maybe the question should be closed or the problem is really tricky. These shouldn't count towards the alert threshold, because it's not the OP's fault if nobody is able to give an answer which the community can get behind.
  4. Obviously, questions without answers should not count. I suspect they are already implemented that way, but I'm not sure.
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Good points, thanks. And yes, questions without answers are not part of the accept rate calculation. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Mar 19 '12 at 11:15

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