The "hand" is about increasing new user retention.
TLDR
SO is on the decline (check Tim Post's MSE post).
People are not always patient when answering questions. In fact some people can be snarky and rude. This causes people to not return to the site.
The hand is to try and alert and remind people that we do indeed have a code of conduct and expect people to follow it. It's obvious, so anyone posting an answer won't miss it.
Why is this on new users?
- Currently new users are being scared off the site at a rate that will kill the site.
- The site will gradually die if we don't have enough new users staying and contributing.
Getting the attention of non-meta folk
... we're talking to people who typically aren't causing the problems that we're trying to solve. The fact that we found a need for an indicator is a big clue there, why didn't we just write a post that said "Please be extra careful when dealing with new users?" Because the people that would most benefit from that guidance, for the most part, don't come here.
The reason the network has placed "helping?" hands at every port of communication with a new user is in an attempt to get the poster's attention. The reason this has been made so obvious, is due to the fact that the people the network are trying to communicate with, within the UX, are not regulars on Meta.
So we need to consider the UX changes are not so much for you and I (you being the reader of this post), but for the people who are not reading this post.
The site is facing attrition that is unsustainable
The new user base that replenishes the site and forms our core user base is declining. The site will actually close down if we do not make genuine new users more welcome. It's in everyone's interest to do so (if we want the site to continue).
New users just don't stick around anywhere close to how they did a few years ago. I'm not going to post the exact rates, and I'm not going to post the exact metrics that we use to consider someone 'lost' as far as likely to re-engage, but I will explain it in very simple terms.
Let's say you have a bank account. Every month, $1000 goes into that
account, and $960 goes out of it. You will never lose your income, and
your expenses will always stay the same. Sure, you don't manage to
save much, but year over year, it adds up, right?
Well, what happens if the income isn't infinite? Let's not talk about
money, let's talk about users, the size of the market that we serve,
and the rate at which it grows and replenishes. If we lose even 25% of
the users we manage to convince to interact with our sites, and the
number that try every day keeps going up exponentially, then it's only
a matter of time before we burn through an entire market faster than
that market significantly replenishes itself.
This is because people had really bad first experiences, and depending on how influential they are, we've lost them and possibly dozens more. It's difficult to calculate who won't try something because of this. But if we don't control this rate, we could (much sooner than later) say that the whole market uses, has tried and stopped using, or won't try our sites.
That is to say, there's a hard stop where you run out of people that are (1) interested in [topic] and (2) successful using your software, and the faster you hemorrhage new users, the faster you approach that point. This is where new users don't replace long-term engaged users that tend to just naturally move on after they've done all they came here to do. This "shrink" in communities is perennial and usually healthy, as long as you eventually move to more coming in than leaving.
The network is losing users and there's concern about the site's future.
It's easy to decry "it's the crap that's killing the site". The truth of the matter is, there will be no site if its growth declines and remains that way. We need to maintain quality content and growth in constructive user base.
Zooming out on the UX
We need to remind ourselves the majority of the main site don't read meta. Our core users who are also active on meta are not the target for the UX changes. The target is the 1000s of people who do not read meta or come into chat
We're all on the same team. Regular meta goers, moderators and even the network powers are all on the same side. We're all just looking at it from different perspectives. We all want the site to be good and succeed. We don't want it to deteriorate and die a slow and painful death.
You (the reader) and I care for the site out of a love and respect for its content and the effort of our community. The network needs to make money and so has a financially vested interest in sustaining it. Either way it would be good to try and zoom out the focus on the UX to have a bird's-eye view of who we're targeting here.
Conflating welcoming new users with unwelcoming old users
The old users have (by definition) proven to stick around, but it's important that our we are for our core user base. However, if we can be mindful not to conflate the arguments. Trying to improve new user retention is not necessarily mutually exclusive to trying to improve old user retention. As I see it the active meta community sometimes sees assisting (genuine) newcomers as not supporting the old timers. We need to take a breath and look after both.
Currently there are two types of problem users that the UX is addressing. The ones who are not active on meta, but put newcomers off with their behaviour (not new). The newcomers who put no effort into contributing and become abusive when asked to improve. Abusive with words or creating and disposing of accounts to continually spam the site with crappy posts. Both of these need to be dealt with.
It's important to remember, it's not the genuine newcomer who is the enemy (Even the newcomer who posts a lousy first post may end up becoming a long term contributor of quality content). It's the newcomer who doesn't care about contributing and the "old-timer" who doesn't care about the newcomers who do care. (Yeah, a lot of nested caring - I need coffee.)
What about the regular users?
I don't have the answer. I'm pretty certain the powers that be have had a scare and they're taking new user retention seriously (I'm gleaning this from meta). I also happen to know that the powers that be are desperately trying to put in fixes to help the established user base (this is from talking to them personally).
The teams are snowed under (they told me), and the communication on the meta sites is not as through as it has been historically (my observation). They're not consulting so much, as trying to stop the ship from sinking (my thoughts). I do know they're listening to all the feedback (my communications with them). So I know we're not being ignored, hence I am patient and trying to convey that to the community, as I am also a member of this community and understand that changes have been a long time coming. What was 6-8 weeks is feeling more like 6-8 years.
Conclusion
For the sake of improving user retention, I suggest we work together as a community, as in the coming years, there won't be a community if we don't.