What can we do to place more value on recovering problematic questions than closing/deleting them?
Honestly, people need to take more time to describe their problem and make sure that it's appropriate for the site from the start. I don't think it's fair to dump responsibility on voters to update their votes later, or on the community to re-review old questions. The question should have been good from the beginning.
The problem is this: so few people actually try to improve their question, I'm starting to give up on lower quality posts. For the longest time, I've been trying to spoon feed advice to newer users to help them improve their posts with the hope that eventually, they'll learn and begin to improve. I try going back over, in the hopes that in the meantime they've corrected their question. What I seeinstead:
There's either no response from the OP, or they begin diving into "just give me the code so I can leave" territory.
They make a very minor edit that addresses maybe one of the problems, but still leaves their question with glaring problems like still being overly broad or vague.
Maybe one in every 20 times, someone will actually improve their post to the point where a previous downvote can justifiably be removed, or even reversed to an upvote.
At this point, it's hard to justify to myself to go back over old posts, or continue to give the same effort that I previously had when I know that my efforts will almost surely be wasted.
What's the solution? Just make sure the post is good from the start!
That's sounds like a bad solution since "good" is subjective, but really, it's the best solution. When we have so many new questions every minute, there's only so much time we can devote to older questions. If the person had just posted a good question from the start, they could have had their answer in minutes, and everyone could have moved on.
That may sound unfair since there's no way to know for sure how a question sounds to someone else, or if you've supplied enough information for someone to he able to help you. At this point though, I can ask a good question with almost a 100% success rate, so it's not unobtainable, as long as you keep some things in mind:
You must have tried solving this yourself first. Show your work! Lay out your debugging efforts so we don't have to play a game of 20 Questions in the comments to flesh out what's already been tried. That wastes the community's time and takes people away from askers who are willing to put effort in.
You must have a clear question. If you can't formulate a clear question, you haven't dug for long enough. When someone dumps a "I don't know what's wrong, help!" question without indicating any effort that they've gone through, it's becoming harder and harder for me to believe that if they didn't put in any effort before, suddenly they will as soon as they get some help.
You should "baby sit" your question for the first ~5 minutes after posting; the critical window. If it's important enough to you that you're asking for help, it's important enough for you to be responsive in the comments when unforeseen issues pop up. If you get a rush of enthusiastic helpers trying to help you, but you ignore them (even if it's just because you aren't paying attention), that's on you. The help was there, you just passed it up. Of course, this doesn't apply when you don't get any comments at all, but usually in those cases the question has deep flaws that can't easily be corrected, and a new visit to the site tour would be beneficial.
In short, prove to the community, from the start, that your question is worth their time investment. There are far too many questions to try and help everybody. If I peek at a question and it's clear that they have put in next to no effort, I may just pass, since there's likely another question somewhere else at the same time that I could be working on.
I'll admit, this doesn't actually address the main question, but I think this may be an XY Problem. We shouldn't even need to go over old posts, so there doesn't need be a process to do so. The problem is that problematic posts are occurring at all.
Note, I'm using "you" here generally; not specifically referring to Gili. It's simpler than writing "then asker of bad questions" everywhere.