- Anything else I'm not thinking of?
They asked potential users (software developers) why how they interact with Stack Overflow.
Such questions might look like:
Do they post questions? If so, how was the experience? If not, why not?
You also ask about various demographic information (age, salary, location, language, culture/race, etc.).
When you get interesting data (like "lots of people find Stack Overflow unwelcoming"), you can go and get more data about that piece.
But along the way, you may notice that (A) many people think it is unwelcoming, and (B) some groups find it more unwelcoming than others.
You can then drill down and find out why it is unwelcoming. But you don't have to be spewing racist slurs for something to be felt more unwelcoming to a minority group than to the majority group.
In Stack Overflow's case, there are lots of low hanging fruit that makes the experience less welcoming. Before you narrow-cast at the problem from a specific subgroup experience, find the low hanging fruit and pluck it. Then iterate.
It isn't hard to see that someone might find asking a question on Stack Overflow is unwelcoming. It disproportionately landing on already marginalized groups within the developer community is not surprising. Observing that this is happening isn't evidence of mass racism or sexism (beyond the background racism/sexism). Regardless of that, it is still evidence of a problem.
It appears their first run at it will be to find unwelcoming parts of the experience and shore them up. The structured help in asking a question may reduce the rude awakening when someone types a "poor" question and hits "ask".
NOTHING in the post you are referring to implies or claims any bias on the part of any member of Stack Overflow. It states that people from group X feel less welcome, and that many people feel unwelcome.
This fact does not depend on members of Stack Overflow trying to make them feel less welcome, being biased, or even any difference in treatment whatsoever. It is an observation.
It manifests in the people who feel unwelcome. It does not require specific targetted behavior on the part of Stack Overflow posters for it to manifest. There may also be such targetted behavior (which you are asking for), but nothing in the plan to reduce this problem nor in the blog post requires such targetted behavior to exist nor be provided.
Only after remedy of the unwelcoming behavior is attempted and appears to work but not on the minorities in question would you then go off and try to find what unwelcoming behavior that is specifically unwelcoming to minorities, beyond a general "blatant racism and sexism is a reason to delete something" pass.