From my experience with the site, with trying to help user moderation, and with the recent mentorship program; often, low-quality and off-topic content comes from confused users who do not understand how to properly use the service provided here.
There are many categories of confusion, but there are several glaringly large ones. These categories each have their own pitfall.
- The user was just looking for terminology to help them do more research
Lacking research and looking like you want someone to either link you to a tutorial or worse write one never goes over well. - The user was just curious about how their progress was looking
Code dumps with a single sentence or two really have no direction and look far too broad, too unclear, and fall into a couple of off topic reasons as well. - The user got stuck on something basic and thought they could ask a quick question
At least asking a basic question can sometimes serve as a duplicate signpost, although often enough the general quality of the new duplicate is so low or so similar to existing content that it does not warrant remaining.
Users often do not fully comprehend that these 3 bullet points are some of the lowest hanging fruit at Stack Overflow. This is the primary source of friction in my opinion. Odd, since it is solved, technically.
Rules in place, the system is fine tuned to handle these types of scenarios. The community dispatches these like clockwork. Both the automated system and the human system work like an engine firing on all cylinders, burning these types of questions day in and day out.
The result though, after creating such an efficient system for dispatching this type of content, perhaps came at the cost of the user attached to the content. At Stack Overflow, experienced users understand the benefits of disconnecting users from content. However, new users often do not understand that there should be this distance between their question about terminology and them as a person. They perceive the removal as a slight.
So I present this as my observation of the problem Stack Overflow has with being welcoming that so many topics are currently covering. I like the intention and resolve the community has right now to solve this issue, and hope that we can find a way to that solution.
I am just not sure what that solution looks like, and so my question is simple: what can we do to make the users generating this content not feel like they are the target of this highly efficient machine?
Does this mean more hand-holding while the machine works? "It's okay, it will all be over soon, and then you can have a new question. Here is what went wrong: a, b, c."
Does this mean making the machine even faster? Like a Band-Aid; one quick rip, easier closure, less exposure. If this content is truly considered off topic, and it would ideally be prevented, then is removing it even faster a better idea?
Explaining what happens while it is happening and expediting the process serve towards reducing friction between user and content removal. However, I am not sure either way is ideal, and to be honest I feel like we have put a lot of work in there already.
What can be done with the existing process to limit the amount of friction between confused users and the removal of their off-topic content?