I was going to raise a new question but instead first searched (who does that?) and found this (one of many related) post on the matter. This is in response to @Martijn-Pieters answer and the comments in the thread, including @mxmissile, as much as my question.
Have you ever walked through a campus, park or large grassy area and noticed even though there's a perfectly good paved pathway "over there", most people seem to walk on the the muddy path that's been created "over here". If you are the maintainer of that space, what are you going to do about it?
Rephrase to, 'why do people keep asking questions "over here", when there's a perfectly good SE site "over there"?' It seems the most popular response from the SE/SO community is, "People should know to use the path", shouting others are wrong for using the mud path, occasionally pointing out (sometimes with kindness), are they aware there's a non-muddy path "over there" and rarely, using their magical/modder powers to teleport them onto the right path.
Maybe simply putting up a sign indicating please use the path, erecting one of those tiny little barriers (say plantings or a little fence) to encourage them to use the path, or maybe simply realigning the path with the most travelled route are options to consider?
My biggest peve with SE is decisions seem to made by SE Devs (or Mods) based on the implied knowledge of the user community and not by understanding the community. How many first-time posters ever read the FAQ, much less visit Meta, or read the 1000's of posts here (and meta.se) providing often conflicting guidance? They do what they do, not what you expect of them.
Trying to be helpful, if I recognize a Q is best answered in another site and choose Close | Belongs on another site, then the site is not listed is the choices, I am given no guidance as to what to do.
Instead, I just don't vote to close or flag and leave it to stagnate here (or accumulate downvotes), frustrating the OP who has no idea why they get no responses except downvotes. That's already 2 bad user experiences. I could choose to close with another option of even Flag for Mod, but those might not be any more appropriate or accurate, another bad experience for others.
Any migration stats are skewed and implicitly biased on many levels as they only measure a portion of potential migrations.
Proposal:
If migrations are automatic once sufficient votes are registered for the same action, then add an option "Other _____" and create similar workflow ...
If a target site is not listed, a flagger may enter ANY other site they believe is suitable (perhaps even with suggestions based on common tags rather than just personal knowledge). The question is then sent to a moderation queue for review. If the reviewers accept the vote, it is manually migrated. Only once a minimum number of successful migrations and a minimum success rate achieved is it added to an eligible target list. The different site list would only ever show the most popular sites approved migration sites anyway.
Similarly if proposed moves to a site are rejected, then the Vote to move could alert the flagger "most votes to move to X are rejected. Are you sure?", and if the flagger proceeds, it goes to the review queue.
More fundamentally, someone needs to get to the underlying cause of why are so many people not posting questions to the most appropriate site (that's semantically different to the wrong site) to begin with? Is this a case of users not knowing of the existence of other sites, being directed to post questions here, or seeing so many similar/ related questions on this site that were not migrated to a more suitable site they just figure this is where they will be answered?
Take for example, this question. Maybe this is best answered is DevOps, or maybe DBA, SW-Eng, or SQA/Test; IDK? I'm not a member of all those sites, I just feel SO is not the best place to get an answer for it.
It was only recently that DevOps site came out of beta, probably spun off from the many Q asked in S/O (and maybe SW-Eng, SuperUser and others) on the topic. If DevOps related questions were previously answered on S/O, then there's still a large body of DevOps questions and answers here, much larger than in DevOps.
If you want to encourage questions to be asked on the correct site, those legacy Questions/Answers should be migrated there. Instead users, especially new users will go with what they see, perpetuating poor choices, making work for mods and diminishing the experience and effectiveness of SE/SO for all.
Sadly, pointing out these observations in meta.so often seems to get the response equivalent of "get off my lawn", or "I told the other person to get off my lawn yesterday, why didn't you listen?". By now if I even notice, my reaction is just a though to myself, "Oh look, another person on the mud path", and I carry on.