Reminding users, regardless of their status, to accept and/or upvote answers that help them is in the best interest of the question asker, the question answerer, S.O., and the community at large.
Reminders do need to contain the qualification of 'helpful', it's counterproductive to upvote or accept bad or useless answers, and they shouldn't be repeated for any given question, but within that limit reminders are a strong net positive.
Voting/accepting answers has two main functions, it helps users looking at existing questions evaluate the answer(s), and it helps motivate users to post answers through gamification. Gamification works. It's used successfully in numerous situations including language learning applications, fitness, etc., and S.O. knows this. Both of these functions work best when there is a high percentage of question askers using them, and reminders (not nagging, but tactful reminders) improve this rate.
For the question asker, the reminder gives them a chance to earn a small amount of reputation, to feel a part of the community, and helps keep them from gaining a reputation as a sponge. It also encourages question answerers to take a risk on users without a history of accepting answers.
Some answers take considerable work to develop, and a low accept rate from new users exerts pressure on some potential answerers to focus on questions from users with a track record of accepting answers. It certainly won't stop all answers to questions from new askers, but it will exert a downward pressure.
For the question answer, the reminder improves the chance of getting reputation, feedback, and a thank you. This keeps answerers engaged and active. Not everyone is motivated equally, but it's foolish to artificially shrink the pool of potential answerers.
For S.O., reminders increase the use of the voting system, which they clearly put in on purpose. It generates more traffic in numerous ways including askers are encouraged to return and vote, answerers feel more rewarded and participate more, and users and answerers get notifications which they check up on. It also makes the site more useful because viewers can more easily identify useful answers, and it makes the site appear more active and therefore more relevant.
For the community at large, reminders encourage more acceptance/voting and therefore they can better tell what answers are good answers. If most askers accept and/or vote on answers, then an answer without votes or acceptance is likely to be low quality, but if most askers don't vote then searchers have to spend more effort evaluating each potential answer.
Obviously reminders can be taken too far and become nags that drive users off or pressure them to accept bad answers, but answers can be bad too and we don't ban answers in general just because they might be abused, we'd have no S.O. if we did that. Allowing and even encouraging tasteful reminders is a win for all involved.
Many sites, including Microsoft, allow answers to include reminders in their posts or even their signatures, and S.O. should do so as well, and should even reject edits that remove tasteful reminders.
thank you it worked
,problem solved
etc could easily determine if there is a possible answer or not. Finally a discrete pop up with a message such asPlease don't forget to mark the answer if it solved your issue
I don't think it would put any sort of pressure to users in the contrary it would contribute to the smooth operation of SO and inform the new users