Community size
Not all communities/target-audiences are of the same size. There are a lot more programmers than quantitative finance specialists for example.
That does not necessarily mean that the StackExchange format is unsuitable for those communities, but it will result in less questions per day, less visitors, etc.
Metrics: Quantity vs. Quality
The way success is measured for beta sites has a significant bias towards quantity (daily visits, questions per day) instead of quality (% answered, answers per question). For specialized communities it might be impossible to reach the desired quantities even with great dedication from every potential member. Even without quantity, a stackexchange site may still become the authoritative source for such communities because of the superior format.
Fixed Costs
I understand that there is a certain fixed cost to create a new site. Graphical design would be a part of that cost for example. These fixed costs would require a certain critical mass. However, it is difficult to imagine that a topic such as 'home improvement' should be struggling to meet those quantity requirements, while quality seems excellent.
Discussion
I'd like to see the success-metrics of a beta-site become more quality-oriented. Is this desirable, and how can this be achieved? Please discuss.
NB: For context, see this question.