There are a lot of questions by new users everyday, and they just get closed/downvoted and ignored. There are also those who have been on the site for years but never participated in anything besides asking one or two questions, and those might well write bad questions, too.
Then I composed a comment for those users, focusing mainly on the new ones, but I also post it to those others, sometimes. Sometimes I edit it, but I can't personalize a message for every case, because there are too many. The message should guide them to links that would teach them how to write a better question, so they would not get downvoted and would actually have their questions answered.
I know that those links may seem bothersome and sometimes sending them may be seem as rude or lazy, but they are actually there to help people, and they helped me a lot when I started in the community. Plus some of the questions I wouldn't know how to answer anyway, so I don't have any purpose other than trying to help.
This is the message:
Welcome to Stack Overflow! We would love to help you, but there are some problems in the current format/content of your question that makes it hard for some of us to help. If you haven't done so already, please take the tour and read "How do I ask a good question?" so it will be easier for us to help you.
But then I went back to some of the questions where I put this message to see if the user had edited the post, and if the comment was helpful, and I saw that my comment was just being deleted.
So I'm asking for opinions on what I should do and if anyone know why was it deleted, so I can write a better one.
Is the message rude? Unhelpful? Too long? Why where it deleted? Should I write a better one or should I just leave those questions alone?
Is there a better way to behave?