Stack Overflow tagging is... well, it works. Kind of. Sometimes, it just plain sucks. There's a few problems I've noticed, and I think there's low hanging fruit to helping new users (since that's now a thing).
Tag search is terrible
I ran across this problem when we were burninating the order tag. css has nothing to do with order. Neither does border. Yet search returns both as highly relevant, probably because they have order in them and lots of questions already. There has to be something to be done here, because simple text matching isn't cutting it.
Excerpts and wikis are seldom emphasized and are often omitted in mobile/app UX
Excerpts are important to help people tag stuff properly. They're so important, in fact, we only let highly trusted users (20k+ rep) edit them without a review. Yet, we completely disregard them in some contexts, and never emphasize them enough.
This is what tagging looks like in mobile browsers
Excerpts? What excerpts? Why is yii relevant to php? (the tag excerpt and wiki answer that) Not only does this rob people of an important tool to figure out how to tag, we've taken that super privilege and treated it like garbage. Oh, and the tag wiki is now thoroughly hidden, so only experienced users know where to find it (click the tag > click Learn more...
). And that assumes you know it exists in the first place.
This information is critical to new users, so why don't we treat it like first class data?
Tags should be linkable
I see this more in SFF.SE, but it's still relevant here. Far too often, someone comes in and picks a subtag. For my [order] burnination, I noted this terrible tagging job (he only tagged it [order] and nothing else), but often people will tag something using a smaller tag (like, say, php-5.6), when a larger tag will get them the help they need (using the better watched php tag).
What would make sense is to link them. To force one tag to add the other. This could be a gold or silver badge privilege, or moderator, or 20k. The ability to say [X] is really a subset tag of [Y], and ensure it gets the tags it needs would help new users abundantly.
Tags should be able to be made mutually exclusive
In the same vein, sometimes people tag [X] and [Y], when they should never be used together. For instance, this Meta request notes that people keep using mesh to mean mesh-network. Since we can't easily rename mesh, it would be helpful to say that you cannot use the tag with any of the networking tags (i.e. network). Attempting to do so should disallow submission, with a notice that the tags cannot be used together (maybe directing them to the excerpt or wiki? hint hint).
Tags with off-topic uses should direct users to the appropriate SE site
We have the seo tag (Now with 100% more asking instructions!). It's got issues. Mostly we close the off-topic ones, and tell them to ask on Webmasters.SE. Which, of course, lots of people do. But why do we insist on making them go through the closure process, when we could tell them up front (better than asking instructions!) about Webmasters? Asking instructions are nice, but, as I noted above, they vanish along with the excerpts in mobile.
Some tags (like ubuntu) have whole SE sites for your asking delight, but we can only use excerpts to tell people about them. We've already covered why that fails. Yet SO/SE never makes any serious attempt to tell people about them. I close a lot of SEO questions with a stock reason that mentions Webmasters and I often get the response:
I've never heard of that website! I'll go ask over there
Which means we now get to close and delete their SO question. Which can create other problems. See the vicious cycle here? Let them know up front that they can get help from a whole community and save us all the frustration of moderating the question in the first place.
order
CSS property and of course we all know about CSSborder
properties, too. It makes a lot of sense to propose css when typing in the border tag, though I agree it's probably suggesting order because it's a substring of border.