Originally, or at least for a good long while, the FAQ on Stack Overflow started off with this:
What kind of questions can I ask here?
Programming questions, of course! As long as your question is:
- detailed and specific
- written clearly and simply
- of interest to at least one other programmer somewhere
... it is welcome here. No question is too trivial or too "newbie". Oh yes, and it should be about programming. You know, with a computer.
(emphasis added. By me.)
It was easy to understand, but imprecise and apparently misleading, because folks used it to justify all sorts of things it was never intended to allow: questions that weren't detailed or specific (but were of interest to other programmers), questions that weren't clear or simple (but were "newbie"), and questions that weren't about programming (but, again, were of interest to programmers).
So it got changed to the current (considerably less-lofty-sounding) verbiage. And the other sites, by and large, followed suit.
But something was lost. The original FAQ alluded to a problem that Stack Overflow - and later Stack Exchange - was designed from the start to solve:
Programmers seem to have stopped reading books. The market for books on programming topics is miniscule compared to the number of working programmers.
Instead, they happily program away, using trial-and-error. When they can't figure something out, they type a question into Google.
(again, I'm graffiting it up with emphasis)
That bit in bold? That's the audience. Not the people asking questions. Those people are weird, deviant, abnormal - normal people just google it. And when a SE site is working, they find their search results leading to a SE site.
Now, folks twisted that "of interest to at least one other..." line all out of shape, claiming it meant your question was ok if someone else liked it, even if it wasn't clear, wasn't on-topic, or wasn't even a question at all...
But all it meant was, your question should be useful to other people. Normal people, out there on Google, searching for answers to their problems.
Fixing the FAQ
As Robert notes, there is a FAQ that goes into detail on all of the various close reasons. It's not information you'd normally want to throw in people's faces though, since - apart from Too Localized - it's stuff that should be obvious: you shouldn't ask an off-topic, nonconstructive, ambiguous rant and expect it to get useful answers. "Duplicate" is sort of a bonus - someone already answered your question, before you even asked it!
Too localized... Well, it's obvious once you know what SE is about. But plenty of folks don't, including plenty of long-time SE users!
So I think we do need that in The FAQ. Not the way it was on Stack Overflow (positioned as one option in a list), and not as a link or subsection leading to an exhaustive description of every way your question can go wrong... But simply as a high-level goal, stated at the top of each site. Maybe something like,
What kind of questions can I ask here?
Answers.onstartups.com is a site for entrepreneurs starting and running new businesses.
Topics include financing, hiring employees, renting an office, legal, marketing, sales, compensation plans, banking, payroll, benefits, and more. This is the place to seek specific advice from your peers on specific problems that you face and others might encounter.
(just to switch it up a bit, no emphasis added)
How you word this will probably depend a bit on who you're addressing, and what your scope amounts to. I rather doubt "Too localized" has any meaning on CodeGolf for instance. But you're absolutely right in that it should be there - much better to give folks the right idea straight away than to let them find it out after they've already put effort into their question.