The edit system is one of the things I love about Stack Exchange's model. I can improve tagging, fix formatting/spelling/grammar/punctuation, remove noise, etc. Being able to do that makes me very satisfied (and I would be very irked without it- I know because I'm now irked when I can't do this on programming-help subreddits).
Try to increase rate of suggested edit reviews:
Change the logic for how many reviews a queue item requires. For example:
Find other ways to make the process of reviewing easier (Ex. tooling improvements, for example:)
- diff feature requests on MSE:
is:q [suggested-edits] review [feature-request] -[status-completed] diff
- diff feature requests on MSE:
Add additional qualifiers for who can review. For example:
- Allow users in the 500-rep queues to review suggested edits on review items in those queues (link to a related post of mine).
Try to incentivize more reviewing. For example:
- Suggested edits take way too long to be reviewed due to a 2017 change to the top bar. Let's revert it
In a similar vein, look at the systematic disincentives as well. For example, pain caused by bad audits (which I have written about in my answer to "Can an unintended consequence of "review audits" be fewer reviewers?")
Try to decrease rate of incoming suggested edits:
Find additional/alternate ways to granting the full-editing privilege. For example:
Opining a successful-edit-count-based two tier suggested edit system
Lowering the rep-threshold for granting full editing privileges. For example:
Wacky off-the-cuff idea: Tuning the threshold so that it normalizes throughput (analogous to the way that Bitcoin adjusts for how long it takes people to mine coins)
Adjust the value in some other way based on the amount of participation on the site. Ex. If N users have less than 2k rep, instead allow the top N or fewer users meeting some lower threshold have full editing privileges.
Wacky off-the-cuff idea: Tuning the threshold so that it normalizes throughput (analogous to the way that Bitcoin adjusts for how long it takes people to mine coins). Note: I'm in no way particularly advocating for this. This is just some lateral-thinking.
Try to guard edit-suggesting behind a rep-threshold (I.e. turn it into a privilege). For example, see this post of Joooeey's
(I have mixed feelings on this idea).
Try to decrease the need for edits by enhancing the post UI to catch things like common spelling issues, common noise (which it already does to some extent- Ex. auto-stripping things like "Hello stranger!" IIRC), etc.
Make suggested edits expire faster (I'm not a fan of this idea when I put myself back in my shoes of no full-editing privilege. See also @RyanM's comment here)