As Jon has already kindly explained, the Webbies are an award given out to websites, much like Grammys are for Music and Clios for advertising. In this case, two awards are given out, one from industry professionals and one that's more like the People's Choice Awards, voted on by anyone willing to give them an email address. Though I can't personally say that I'm aware of them to the same degree as I am of the Oscars, they seem to be a pretty big deal for the internet. So, for a site to be nominated, it can be a big deal to the site.
I think, rather than why you should care, what you're trying to understand is how this impacts you as a user - and that's a fair question to ask. We use these banners infrequently so there's a heightened sense of urgency and attention any time we do use them - so I can imagine that tickles your mind to think "this must be a big deal that I need to know about and act on"... and, well, it's not. This is something that's exciting in the same way it's exciting for a musician to be nominated for a Grammy and it's something you want to share with the people who are interested in you. The fact that the users here can participate in voting for the public awards means that you can influence the outcome, too.
Being nominated in the Community category is recognition for what y'all have done with the platform - making it a place people can come to get excellent answers to questions about coding - this is a service that programmers and enthusiasts around the world take advantage of frequently, if not daily. We are and have always been proud of that work. Yes, the last couple of years have been rocky to say the least - there's a lot of issues with how the platform sets expectations for new users and trains them to participate effectively. This has caused some friction between people who are frustrated at work and trying to get an answer to their problem and people trying to help them get that answer by writing one or pointing them to a similar one. I think there have been a lot of changes recently that are improving that experience and we're continuing to do work to reduce that friction as much as we can.
There's also a signal that being nominated (and winning) the Community category could send to people looking for an internal Q&A platform like Teams - if our community is recognized for being great, that's something that might encourage them to give Teams a try for their internal community, too, and having more people using (and paying for) the platform gives us more to work with to improve it.
We chose to add the banner for a short period of time for all of the reasons I've outlined above - it was put up late on Wednesday and taken down on Friday. This is a tool we don't use often and, as I noted earlier, that means it can be interpreted as rather urgent, particularly considering that we should remember that SO is a place where people come while they're at work and we should be careful about distracting them unnecessarily. We were excited about the votes we got from having this banner up and visible to millions of users even in the short period of time it was up. We also need to make sure that we're thinking holistically about whether something's best served in a banner, blog post, meta announcement, or on one of our social media accounts so that it gets to our community in a contextual way that doesn't impact their workflow.
javascripy:void(0);
. One wonder if they are only interested in harvesting emails for later use in spamming. Why didn't Stack Exchange check this first before they recommended it in the banner????