Often I receive valid answers to my valid questions, but my question remains with zero votes, i.e user providing the answer did not find it necessary to upvote my question (yet wasted time to provide an answer).
I'm not talking about spam/homework/trivial/somehow-invalid questions. I'm talking about "ordinary" question that deserves (and hence - receives) the answer. I believe that if the question is "good enough" to provide answers, it is already useful to the community (tiny tiny bit at least), at the very least - it should be from the perspective of the user providing answer (otherwise, why bother answering and why not close it as duplicate/spam/etc).
I'm not saying that users should always upvote questions they answer, but for the most part, I don't think why they shouldn't.
So... What's the phenomenon here?..
P.S.: An example qeustion: How do I generate script for LocalDB database?
EDIT: Well now... It appears that, based on the (much upvoted) answer below, the question does not receive upvotes if it is missing any of these:
"shows research effort; it is useful and clear"
Lets take this current question as an example.
First part (effort) is not applicable, as I couldn't have conducted any "research" prior to this. And yes - I tried to find similar question but I couldn't. Now it appears that there is indeed similar question, but I can swear it did not pop up in the suggestions when I was composing this question.
Third part (clearness) is trivially satisfied as well. I was very clear about my question.
Now the second part (usefulness) is interesting. Basically at least 13 (and counting) people found the below given answer "useful", while the question's score is minus 6. You say:
"There are millions of questions here with answers that aren't actually useful questions."
Don't you contradict yourself when you provide answer to the question that you find not useful?
In other words, If your answer below deserves 13+ upvotes, how can the addressed question be so "not useful" that it has minus six score?