In more detail...
How?
- Allow bounties on specifically tags, topics, and examples
- Tags - for empty or abandoned tags that need more documentation in general
- Topics - for critical topics the bounty giver believes are critical
- Examples - for widely read examples that are messy, wayward, and unorganized*
- Allow the bounty giver to choose who to give the bounty to
- Allow the bounty giver to coarsely divide the bounty reward
- This encourages people to contribute, even if they have seen another user make major contributions that would probably otherwise cause the bounty to be awarded to that other user.
- This makes Documentation a more collaborative place.
- Documentation does not have the binary nature of Q&A.
- Prevent premature bounty giving by enforcing a fixed bounty time
- Even if a user's contributions satisfy the bounty giver
- Again, documentation does not have the binary nature of Q&A.
Why?
From the original +200 meta discussion, Docs is broken: Writing Docs we Actually Need:
The current system rewards writing documentation that is already covered by the official docs. Meanwhile, popular libraries without good official docs are undercontributed. The system is broken, and it needs fixing.
A few answers have proposed the aforementioned solution.
Users who find that official documentation is poor and the Stack Overflow version is likewise are the ones who will invest in setting bounties. The more popular the object lacking documentation, the more bounties it receives, and the more necessary better documentation. In essence, supply matches demand.
I hope this is more convincing than the original question.
Footnotes
*this is an enevitable part of the incremental, distributed development experienced by popular posts. Almost all popular examples show these symptoms.