The single most popular reason for people to coordinate voting on this site is to evade question bans. People who rely on this site to do their job will do whatever it takes to keep asking questions here ... in certain industries located in specific parts of the world [it is assumed you will do this]... some companies even teach new employees, formally or informally, how to create sock puppets or participate in voting rings... to evade question bans.
Question bans result from persistent bad questions. So Brad's statement suggests that a substantial fraction of some industries in some countries are repeatedly and frequently posting bad questions. I could imagine that might be a large stream of bad questions (if the industries and countries are large enough), and therefore might be a substantial contribution to the stream of bad questions we complain about. But is that so?
About what fraction of bad questions are upvoted by voting rings?
Why does this matter? Quality creates kindness, and conversely low quality creates unkindness. The vast stream of bad questions annoys the site curators, grinding them down, until they become snarky or even rude.
If a large fraction of bad questions are generated and upvoted by members of voting rings, those voting rings are therefore indirectly contributing to the site being unwelcoming, and we might make the site more welcoming by focusing on reducing the effect of those kinds of voting rings.
What is more, the members of those rings should not be people we welcome, and probably have no interest in producing questions valuable to others. So attempts to "welcome" them are misguided. If a large fraction of bad questions come from them, better and quicker detection and elimination of them would enable "welcoming" and help efforts to be directed at worthwhile questions.