This comes up perennially in different forms and context, but the guidance that I give to folks since being elected in 2011 hasn't changed.
If it's a good faith attempt to directly address the question, it's an answer.
That doesn't make it:
- Correct
- Optimal
- Not overly laconic
- Jell-O, or a pudding pop
.. but it is an answer. Downvote it if you want, high-rep users can even vote to delete it if the quality is so bad that it's embarrassing, but a group of people taking what was a good faith attempt at answering a question and insisting that it wasn't an answer at all is essentially gaslighting the person that wrote it, which isn't a very nice way to welcome them. This is a common source of friction for very new users.
It's okay to tell people that while we appreciate the effort, a little more is needed in order for their contribution to be lasting. That's kind of brutal when you consider that it's a completely volunteer effort that runs entirely off the spare cycles that folks can give, but it's honest, and lets people know that they're probably in the right place if quality and becoming a better communicator is what they're after.
Saying hey, you didn't even answer the question is like saying you didn't type anything at all or, you must love turtles.
Being more direct by saying okay, this is a great start, but you have to flesh it out a bit if you want it to last is a lot more productive than looking at a circle someone made and screaming at them that it's not round - all you're going to do is give them quite a jolt and likely get into an argument. It's not round enough is quite a bit different, and looks for a different kind of response :)
When it comes to ultimately deciding what content folks vote to delete, the distinction starts to lose meaning (stuff gets deleted for a variety of reasons, it's either in the 'keep' or 'pitch' pile at that point). But initially, it's pretty important to keep that distinction, and help keep the grumbling that we're a bunch of deletionist jerks down a bit :)