I haven't had a chance to speak with the rest of the team yet, but this taps into one of the things that our research turned up: technical writers use templates. I don't mean the (slightly insulting) function comment blocks. Instead they use templates from tools such as MadCap Flare, Confluence and even Microsoft Word. While Documentation has a template, it's very rigid. Judging from what we learned, Docs 2.0 would need simple and flexible ways to create templates for different types of documentation.
So what does this have to do with your question? Well, in my experience, the trick with self-answering questions is writing a question that other people can reasonably add answers to. It requires not only a technical understanding, but an understanding of what is and is not welcome by the community. Misjudging the nuances can result in your carefully crafted answer getting downvoted and deleted along with the question. It's certainly not something we can expect even experienced users to pull off with regularity.
The shame of it is honest self-answered questions all have the same form:
I discovered something obscure and useful to know in [tag]. I think other people ought to know it too. Rather than post this on a blog or something where nobody will ever see it and it can't be properly vetted, I'm posting it as an answer to this "question". If you have an alternate method, please add your "answer" too!
Instead, we ask people to write these questions Jeopardy-style without a lot of guidance to how to do that. It occurs to me that a template could really help people ask better questions they plan to answer.
So moving Examples from Documentation could be a good opportunity to try out an ad hoc template created and refined here on meta. Without putting too much thought into it, how about:
What are some examples of {task or feature you are trying to document}?
{Briefly describe the task or feature.}
{If there is documentation elsewhere (particularly in the official documentation), explain why it's not sufficient.}
{Describe any constraints that might apply. For instance, maybe you don't have root access or you can't upgrade to the latest version. You don't need to justify these restrictions, but doing so might avoid frivolous comments.}
Like I said, this is just a rough sketch of what might help askers produce good questions. Doing this right would probably require asking another question on meta. Really doing this right would require building templates into the ask page so that the prompts are right there while you post.
For answers, I'd suggest posting just one Example per question. Topics are supposed to be (and actually were) very broad, but many Examples are about the right scope for Stack Overflow answers. I'd recommend editing down longer, more meandering Examples, however.
Also, to preserve attribution, get the list of example contributors:

Then add attribution at the end of the answer:
Originally posted on Documentation with contributions from: {insert profile links}.
It would probably be nicer to include display names too. Obviously, you don't need to include this line if you were the only contributor.