I notice regularly that folks who are new to Stack Overflow often post their question and then are not on the site for some significant time (e.g. hours). If their question is not entirely clear (which they often are not for people new to the site) and the question is targeted at a high traffic tag like "javascript" or "c#" where the pace/volume just moves faster, then a bunch of not so great things happen:
As the new question comes to everyone's attention, lots of people read it, try to figure it out, don't quite understand it and some people ask clarifying questions in the comments.
More people read the question, see the request for clarification and just move on - basically wasting their time and resources that could have been applied more usefully on the site.
Some people may venture a guess as to what the OP meant and post an answer based on that guess. You may even get multiple answers based on different guesses as to what they wanted. Unfortunately for all, these guesses are generally a waste of time for all. One guess might happen to be mostly what the OP intended, but all the rest are simply a waste of time that could have been much more productively spent actually helping someone.
After some period of time with no response from the OP, often as short as 10-15 minutes, but sometimes longer, the question will start to receive down votes or close votes. Now with the superpowers that some people have, it can only take one close vote to close the question or put it on hold.
Then, some time later (often many hours later), the OP returns and finds their question has been closed and people have been frustrated with them for writing a cryptic question and being non-responsive. Most newbies who get their question closed just go away. Even though there's a procedure that could provide clarification and get the question opened again, I don't think I've ever seen that happen for a new poster. If nothing else, they're probably intimidated because it appears they've done something wrong (actually, they have).
The common thread in all of this is the new poster often disappears for some significant period of time after they post and they are not around to answer clarifying questions. What we want people posting questions to know is this:
A huge percentage of the traffic that will see their question is going to happen in the first 30-60 minutes. This is probably particularly true for questions in high traffic tags such as "javascript". There's just so many questions that most people browsing the site look at recent questions, not old questions.
So, their best chance to get a good answer is in that first 30-60 minutes. When they post the question, they need to make absolutely sure that the question is clear for everyone who sees it in that first 30-60 minutes.
Besides posting a crystal clear question in the first place, the best way to make sure the question is clear is to hang around and check for comments at the 10, 20 and 30 minute mark after posting. If you do that, you will have an immediate opportunity to fix up your question if it is proving to not be clear exactly what you're asking.
In addition, if people are posting answers, you can comment on those answers in case the answers aren't quite hitting the mark of answering what you meant by your question. Once you have an answer, that person is engaged with your question and you have a short window to engage back with them in case their answer isn't quite what you wanted. If you aren't around when they post their question to see it shortly after they provide and you come back a long time later, you have a much lower chance of maintaining that engagement with them if you need or want more than they've written or they were a little off base with what you meant to ask.
It was pointed out to me by someone else I was discussing this issue with that this behavior of post, go away, then come back some long time later is perhaps what people are used to with internet forums or mailing lists. Post a question on a mailing list, go to sleep, wake up in the morning and see who responded. Stack Overflow doesn't really work that way (thank goodness). It's much more interactive and treating it like a mailing list question will probably just result in a closed question unless you were perfectly clear in your first attempt.
So, this is all a long setup for the issue/feature request which is how can we make sure that new posters know that it is in their own best interests if they hang around for at least 30 minutes after they post to check for comments and answers to make sure that people understand their question and are able to provide answers or that the answers being provided are aimed in the right direction?
FYI, you can see a mini-discussion of this issue in the comments for this post: Promises vs Reactive vs? which is where it was suggested I post here. On that particular question, I was able to guess (correctly) what I thought the OP meant, but others did not understand the question so it was put on hold before the OP returned some number of hours later. And the OP in that questions confirms that they were treating it like a mailing list posting.
onbeforeunload
popups reading something like, "Please return to this page 30 minutes from now to check for answers or comments."