This plot I just made for an unrelated thread on meta.physics.SE* might be relevant:
What I'm plotting here is the average score of the first answer to each question, vs. the age of the question when it was first answered, grouped in logarithmically spaced bins. The area of the dots is proportional to the number of answers in each bin; the counts for SO are scaled down by a factor of 10 compared to the other sites. Closed questions, self-answers and answers seemingly posted before the question (which can happen if questions are merged) are excluded.
What you can see from this plot are a few general trends:
SO is huge. Like, really huge. (Note the 10x downscaling compared to the other sites.)
The bigger the site, the less upvotes you tend to get per answer. Even ignoring RPG.SE (which I deliberately picked for contrast, because I knew it was a smallish site with a "soft" topic, a core of very skilled answerers, and a serious focus on quality over quantity), that seems to be the general trend here.
The bigger the site, the more important it is to be fast. On SO, the average score for a first answer posted one minute after the question is just over 6, while the same average for a first answer posted four minutes later is a bit under 2.4 votes.
(Running the query for other sites and summarizing the results is left as an exercise. I did try it for several other sites, and noticed nothing too far from the general trends noted above, even if there does exist a lot of variation in voting culture between SE sites.)
Basically, if you want to get a lot of upvotes on SO, the first five minutes of the question's life seem to be the critical window — that's when most of the active regulars will see it. If you miss that window, you might as well just take your time writing your answer.
Anyway, I think the take-home message here is simply that what's changed is that SO has grown bigger, and, somewhat inevitably, the scaling has not been uniform. There are now so many new questions being posted on SO that nobody can possibly read all of them.
Alas, one side effect of this is that, unless your question just happens to fall under a specialized tag that has an active subcommunity, you basically get five minutes of fame, and (unless it gets on the Hot Network Questions list, or otherwise "goes viral") that's it — after that, you're lucky if anybody stumbles across it at all. If they do, and answer it, the question will get bumped and maybe attracts a few more views and votes from people browsing the front page, but, with SO's question volume, it's not going to stay there very long even then.
Of course, one should not take too one-sided a view here — there are plenty of other factors that matter too (as examining the enormous variance in the scores will reveal), not the least being simply that well written and interesting questions and answers will always be more likely to get upvotes. But clearly, on a site as big as SO, speed does matter.
*) As opposed to metaphysics.SE.