I've asked myself that many times in the past, especially when new to one of the sites.
Now that I'm 58k+ on the stack exchange network I can reflect on my experience.
So, the best answer I have found is actually just to practice your craft and see what questions arise and what newly learned knowledge can help you provide answers to others and to pose good questions that others will want to engage in, upvote, etc..
Another approach that can help is to ask questions (and provide answers) to new technology areas. For example questions and answers about Visual Basic and C++ are likely to: already be asked; already have answers; be answered quickly by experts. However questions about Ruby on Rails version 4 or new approaches to using MongoDB are more likely to be questions and answers that you can get points for.
It is also a good idea, as you start to have good answers and to have asked good questions to link to them in other, possibly highly-read questions/answers. Use the actual 'link' link as this will include your id. Obviously you should only do this only actual questions/answers that are relevant to the one you link to (judgement call of course).
Also 'upgrade' your own (or others) questions and answers as time goes by to:
- provide more detail
- add helpful tags to existing questions, especially when your answer has up votes
- provide the content referred to in links.
- update out-of-date links with new urls.
- add tags to your own homepage view so that the questions are more relevant to you.
- delete your own 'bad' q&a's that got downvotes.
as code
. Makes it more legible. Which is helpful.