I have been a member of Stack Overflow since may 2012, almost 8 years now.
I mainly use SO as a resource to find the answers what I need, when I need it. The pro of Stack Overflow is, that if you know what to search for, you can find your answer relatively quickly with some google fu, related questions, etc...
Over the years I've slowly been becoming invested in the community aspect, willing to help people, trying to help out here and there occasionally, and I've seen the community grow, change and adopt scary new things of controversy several times. So I'm not scared about change per se.
I am scared about the direction Stack Overflow the Company with shareholders is approaching its user base, its community and alienating the core of that community. With a tight-knit community where you have a few "big" names who take the lead consistently in adopting things, or fire other people on to take action and "do stuff", talking, arguing, investing in issues.
The drama of the last few months though, have sent massive shock waves through this tight-knit community and the weave has started to unravel. I can see this, as a lurker and occasional partaker on meta, I don't say much, but I read a lot of the ongoing discussions and concerns.
People, who have been taking the lead, taking pride in their moderation duties, their badges and their feeling of fighting the "horde" of spam, are ceasing their activities. Questions that would have been closed in seconds, now live on for hours sometimes, gathering bad answers, and muddling Google search results.
The value of SO is concise, to the point googleable questions and answers. Bad questions and bad answers muddle the results. Muddle makes more muddle, and it will decrease the value of SO, because Google does care about duplicate content, and will devalue results if this trend continues and new people don't step up.
My personal journey over the last months with the new front page, hiding the questions when going to the website directly, the new TOS, forced license change which is legally extremely questionable, firing of a community elected moderator and pillar of community Monica, the letting go of community managers which were role models and central to the community as a source of reason, the consequent no answering of community concern, or if there is an answer it's carefully worded lawyer speak, which is frankly insulting to me as a developer, I don't know how others feel.
I have gone from I want this to be a community I invest in and help make better, to this website only needs to give me answers; when it doesn't I'll go somewhere else. The last few months when I've encountered a problem that wasn't on Stack Overflow I have refrained from posting it here. I've stopped caring about contributing to Stack Overflow, the company with shareholders out to make money.
Until now people have been looking at Stack Overflow as this:
It's a company, of course it needs to make money, but we have faith that Stack Overflow realizes the value of its community, as that is the content-generating thing that drives people there and slowly, but surely, we will get features that makes everything better for us the community to help in this symbiotic relationship.
But the last few months, it seems that Stack Overflow wishes to reposition itself. To increase shareholder value and revenue. All fine and well, but we the community really do not care that much. As long as Stack Overflow makes a profit and keeps the site up, we are good, do your thing. Experiment with teams, documentation, etc... all you want. But the moment your shareholder value increasing strategy touched the community, you have hurt us deeply, tore deep wounds in us and we lost trust of the our symbiotic partner. You have removed pillars of the community by force. These are wounds. Deep wounds.
The sentiment of the remaining core of the community can be summarized in this GIF image:
So, when you want to increase shareholder value, I applaud you. But do not believe Stack Overflow is a normal website. The people who use Stack Overflow build the web and the supporting infrastructure. Heck, the inventor of the next greatest programming language may be on here now. You don't want this to turn into Quora, Yahoo answers or god forbid Technet. You want this to remain the gem that it is, that pops up in every Google result as a highly valuable resource, that drives ad revenue, etc... Because... we can and will build your greatest competitor in a heartbeat if we as a community abandon ship. It's not like it's a hard website to build; we as a community just like it here.
Let in the bad quality, drive away the core community that bind the lurkers like me and that goes down the drain over the next few years, losing any relevance Stack Overflow had and it goes the way of Myspace.
You have a chance to rebuild your symbiotic relationship with the community, to stop the bleeding from the gashes, to heal the wounds but it takes time. Trust is hard to earn and easy to lose.
My suggestions to you
Please take a tablet, a nice cup of [insert favorite beverage here] and read the most answered/upvoted/downvoted questions on the global meta and the Stack Overflow meta. Start with those from the beginning of the sites, the oldest.
Read the discussions the members had, see the passion, the changes, the arguments, and the bitter arguments. Perhaps also of other sites, Area 51, etc... I don't know how much you wish to invest in this really.
Get to know the creature that is wounded, but essential to your survival in a symbiotic relationship. And then make a blog post about it, and reach out to us. Don't focus too much on shareholder value when you communicate to us, but acknowledge us, acknowledge our desires, our worries and provide us with a roadmap of what's going to happen to us as website communities. Do we get tools, new ways to approach things, etc...
Just look at what we, the community did for Stack Overflow, that made Stack Overflow the company possible. Don't hurt your symbiotic partner, or else rogue symbiots will come in, and that may work out, but if you look in nature, it usually doesn't end up good for the host. Do you feel lucky?