I have been thinking about this for a long time- should there not be a better way to talk to a mod/user after they have put your question on hold?
When a question is not up-to-the-mark moderators/users usually put it on hold (and they should!). But. they mostly give a very vague explanation, i.e. a random quote from the Stack Overflow help page. The reason for this might be they don't have all the time in the world. True, but what if the explanation is so vague, a novice (or anyone for that matter) does not understand why exactly their question was taken down? Even if the novice is legitimately wrong, they might think they were right, because of the vague explanation.
Sometimes, mods forget they ever put a question on hold (even after changes were made)! Believe me, I have had a few experiences. So, I think there should be a way for the person in question, to contact that specific mod/user who took their post down and understand what went wrong.
Of course, the Stack Overflow help page says "flag any content and a moderator will come to you!" (Or something like that). We all know that would not work in this case. And how can I forget the reopen review queue? Seriously, how many people with above 3k reputation exist, and look at that list? Another way was, "leave a comment and the user will get back to you!". I tried it, did not work. Then I thought. if I was the user, would I respond to a random comment on (one of my, oh so many) Posts?* So, comments might work but, it is quite a moon-shot.
Now, why would a user listen to a request for re-evaluation then? Answer is: If it is a different stream of messages (separate from comments) then at the least they would read some of them, because it won't be like spam to them!
*I assume people who put questions on hold are regular users of Stack Overflow and contribute (question and answers) a whole lot to the community.
And how can I forget the reopen review queue? Seriously, how many people with above 3k reputation exist, and look at that list?
Quite a few. Of all queues, that is usually the one that is empty, or at least has the fewest posts.