Additionally, I don't think that a user should ever have to ask themselves, "Which site in the Stack Exchange network would be the more appropriate site to ask my question?"
This is indeed the case. Questions can be on-topic on multiple StackExchange sites and that is just fine, given that the fields partly overlap. So in case you have such a question it would be advantageous to actually think about which site would be most appropriate.
In Area 51, the hatching place for new sites, you typically have to motivate what makes your new proposed site different from already existing sites. It doesn't have to be totally disjoint, but there must be a reasonable difference to already existing sites, otherwise StackExchange employees will stop the proposal.
For database administrators the focus / on-topicness is:
- Database Administration including configuration and backup / restore
- Advanced Querying including window-functions, dynamic-sql, and query-performance
- Data Modelling and database-design, including referential-integrity
- Advanced Programming in built-in server-side languages including stored-procedures and triggers.
- Data Warehousing and Business Intelligence including etl, reporting, and olap
Which has some overlap but also differences to StackOverflow. For example there is a lot of modelling included that might/would be off-topic on StackOverflow.
Also see the announcements on the Area 51 proposal of dba.stackexchange.com or in their meta StackOverflow still has a lot of DBA questionsStackOverflow still has a lot of DBA questions.
Synopsis: Database Administrators and StackOverflow are overlapping but also have their unique topics. Some questions will be on-topic on both in which case one of the sites will probably be more appropriate in terms of faster and better results. A smart choice might be to have more programming related database questions here while other more logic related database questions might get better results there. Questions which are off-topic in the respective StackExchanges will be migrated or closed.