Stack Overflow has a bad reputation for new users. It's seen as a pretty hostile place. If you don't post a good question, you get hammered with downvotes or close votes. Seasoned vets may have survived the trial-by-fire here and now see it as a rite of passage, but the SO community loses tons of potential users because of the way newbies are treated and that reputation keeps others from even trying.
It should be possible to maintain or improve overall question quality, but have a better process for newbie users who are still learning how to write a good SO question.
The folks at Stack Exchange appear to be working on such a system to better onboard new users which is currently being referred to as "staging ground". You can read about it here and here.
Some tolerance for people who don't have great communication skills, but who are willing to engage and clarify would also be useful.
Here's my process for dealing with an unclear question.
If the question is so far from describing anything relevant to SO (beyond salvage IMO), then I may just downvote and close vote regardless of how long it's been since it was posted. I will try to leave a comment with a link to how to write a good question or a link to what's on topic here in hopes that the newbie at least sees that as something important to read before posting again.
If it was posted more than a couple hours ago and people have asked clarifying questions in the comments and the OP is not engaging or responding, I vote to close and may downvote also. In my opinion, if people engaged to help and you weren't around to engage and the question doesn't stand on its own, then it should be closed. When I'm feeling generous, I will leave a comment telling the OP that people tried to engage to help, but they weren't around to respond and on SO, you have to be around for at least the next hour after posting in case people don't completely understand what you were asking. Don't post and then go to sleep or out to dinner. Post when you can check back multiple times in the next hour.
If the question is new (like posted in the last 30 minutes) and has some skeleton of an on-topic issue and I have time to be around over the next 30 minutes, I will engage and ask some clarifying questions in the comments. If no response in the next 30-60 minutes, then go to #2 above and close. If the OP engages and is starting to clarify what they meant, I will try to coach them on how to edit their question to fix it and I will hope that other drive-by readers (who aren't participating in the coaching) don't just close the question that we're working on (though that happens a lot).
If the question is new and others have engaged with trying to clarify the question, I will just skip on by and hope that others can continue to work with the OP to clarify. I personally see no point in dropping a downvote or close vote on a question that is "being worked". If the question stays in bad shape over time (engagement to fix stops or question is just never edited to fix it), it will get cleaned up by others. But, there's no great service to be done for anyone, by hammering the question while it's being worked on.