Why don't people sign up and contribute?
Short answer:
As Servy said, "Because most of them never need to."
Long answer (check TL;DR at the end):
First we need to find out what people cannot do without registering. We could just see Why should I create an account?, or ask ourselves:
Why people would like to sign up?
- To ask new questions
- To give new answers
- To give thanks for an useful answer (by voting)
- To add suggestions on answers (by commenting or suggesting edits)
The first two cases could be expected later, when people would like to feel more involved in the community. The last two cases are, in my opinion, more suitable for newcomers at first.
Then we need to find out how easy it is to do those things after signing up:
- To ask new questions or give new answers, it is needed just to sign in, so 1 reputation point is enough to create posts.
- To give thanks for an useful answer (by voting), 15 reputation points are needed to vote up
- To add suggestions on answers an user could:
- Suggest an edit, 1 reputation is enough in our model, but it requires much more effort to do it well enough to avoid rejections than just a comment.
- Add a comment, allowed since 50 reputation points to comment everywhere
I know why the system is currently this way. I'm not questioning if it is OK so or if it should be another way.
Now, we should think about this model: if the advantages of the current system compensates the amount of people not signing up, then the answer could be:
Q- Why don't people sign up and contribute?
A- status-bydesign
Otherwise, we could think about the body of your question.
I am the only person I personally know who even has an account.
Why is that? Why do so many people not consider signing up, let alone contributing?
Me too. So I asked some people around me (all them working as programmers), and got 13 answers:
1 - I don't bother, my time is precious.
4 - I don't feel myself confident enough to ask/answer in English.
8 - I scare of being ashamed if somebody search and find me with low reputation or even worse if I make a big mistake.
I ask myself: Did I scare to participate even if I was using Stack Overflow for long to get answers?
My answer is: Yes, I love user-content driven sites, but also I refrained to participate due to the possibility of being ashamed by my workmates/friends if I failed to do the right things at the start; the reputation system was the main reason, in the same way as I almost do not use any social network: everything you write (in public) is kept forever (for glory or shame).
That also gives me some clues to answer now your last question:
Q- Do other people find the same level of apathy amongst your co-workers?
A- I find the same level of refraining, but I think it is not apathy.
What are we doing wrong, or not doing? Or is this just "the way people are"?
I would add: Could something different be done to encourage more participation?
First, we need to know a bit about how this site is working now, by studying the participation levels. I'm searching for a recent answer in meta with graphics and data on the subject, but I cannot find it now. I'll retry later, but for now this is what I remind: most users keep with 1 reputation forever, and a very low amount of users contributes a lot.
This phenomenon is known as participation inequality, with just very low amount of users accounting for most the action while a very high amount of users never or rarely contribute.
There are a lot of articles about the subject, but I would like to chose an old article by Jacob Nielsen, The 90-9-1 Rule for Participation Inequality in Social Media and Online Communities.
In the last paragraph How to Overcome Participation Inequality, he answer You can't, but I find useful the choice about how you shape the inequality curve's angle.
Make it easier to contribute.
Make participation a side effect.
Encourage more to improve (editing) over creating.
Rethink the reputation system.
Make it easier to contribute.
An unregistered user already gets a good popup when trying to upvote or comment.
There could be added a link to Why should I create an account?, or even the full text (it is short).
Also maybe something like How to Say Thanks in an Answer should be clear enough for newcomers. And it could be easy to oversee that you can post answers being unregistered and hard to understand why not ask for clarification on existing answers
If it is a registered user asking a question, a better template could be handy. See Could some bad questions be avoided with additional prompting?.
For an already experienced user, make it easier to find interesting questions to answer, (not everybody handles the SEDE well).
Encourage to improve (editing) over creating.
I know in our model it is encouraged to edit (see What kind of behavior is expected of users?), and we already have got some good improvements to avoid duplicated questions, like this popup when asking, but there is still some room for improvements. I mean to improve the usability of canonical questions: The Wikipedia of Long Tail Programming Questions.
Duplicates and related questions should easily find a place in canonical questions, but I find difficult to learn about that feature on Stack Overflow. Related: How to handle questions whose root cause is an already well-answered issue?.
Rethink the reputation system.
Besides the possible effect of potential users refraining to sign up, I think a more complex reputation system is needed, not just as it is now. I think the current reputation system is not too bad, but it is far from perfect. But this could be a subject for another debate (too broad to include it here). However, I want to include at least two thoughts. Once burned, twice shy. If the system has treated you poorly (even if you deserved it), then why should you help? I find Makoto's suggestion interesting: Question Forgiveness and Why is Stack Overflow so negative of late?.
Even with some high reputation some users have a feeling on the system encouraging to game it. See Michael Richter's article on gaming Stack Overflow's reputation: Why I no longer contribute to Stack Overflow?
Participation can also be a side effect. There are a lot ways to achieve this, and there are some interesting suggestions on meta.
A “friends list” on Stack Overflow would be nice. RSS makes it easy to follow a few, not a bunch; however for now Stack Overflow is not a social network.
Related could be Show off the posts I'm most proud of, or another suggestion I cannot find now about high reputation points users allowed to show others (mark) interesting questions and answers. I would add: Users should be able to recommend other similar/related questions that also helped them for this question. These links' visibility should be prominent.
But again, I'm not trying here to debate on new features; just thinking loud about what could be done.
TL;DR
All this wall of text is a non-sense. The answer to this question is 42.
If you prefer a more serious specific answer, chose one of these two answers:
Q- Why don't people sign up and contribute?
A1- status-bydesign
A2- The advantages of the current system do not compensate the amount of people not signing up.