A well designed guided process before asking the question would help our community and will also have a positive impact on the quality of new questions.
Stack Overflow slowly becomes overwhelmed by the number of new posts. Many of the new posts are of low quality or are simply off-topic for Stack Overflow. This is especially true for users first interacting with the Stack Exchange universe.
I think the right path to ensuring good quality is not to make it harder for new users to ask questions. Instead we should focus on making it as easy as possible to find out if a question will be well received here on Stack Overflow, before formulating the question itself.
I propose that Ask Question
at the very beginning shows an interactive flowchart or decision tree that helps new users find the right Stack Exchange site for their question (if any).
Ideally the process would check first if the new question would be on-topic on Stack Overflow. If not, check if it could be on-topic on a partner site and refer to it. If it is on-topic, the goal is to assure that the user has gathered all required information required for a decent question. In case of a bug it should e.g. make sure that the user already has a MCVE and if not link to the excellent documentation we already have.
This question is not a exact duplicate of Establish a two stage question commit process?. Adding a checkmark just before submitting the question is not what I propose. I want a guide before new users start typing their question.
and is a solution that most users will just skip
- I would not make it a tour, but a mandatory process to go through.Please select what of these 5 options describes your question best
a), b), c), d), e). And depending on the answer the system asks a more specific question or refers to a partner site. In the end users have to answer maybe 3 questions instead of reading a page of text.