My impression on this is that Stack Exchange Q/A is a very flexible format that can suit more or less all the uses of meta but none of them quite right. Maybe support is the closest: you ask "how do I do this?" and you get "you do it like this". But still is not exactly right since, unlike in SO, support questions are not so much required to be useful for the future and can be much more case-specific. The result is that the mechanics of the site have a different meaning, usage or applicability depending on the "question", in something of a tacit but fluid consensus.
I have written down my current understanding of the site, with the shortcomings that I see in it and possible alternatives.
- Question: "I have this problem using the site" / "I do not know how to do this"
- Answer: "Here is how you can solve or do that"
- Upvote: "I have this problem too" / "I think this is an important or interesting problem"
- Downvote: "You did not do any effort to solve this" / "The formulation of your question is poor or unclear"
- Shortcomings: Meaning of votes may not be clear for the OP or even useful in general. In most cases, support questions could be "closed" forever after they are resolved, as once the person solves the specific issue there is no need to keep the question alive for more answers, edits or votes.
- Alternative: Q/A, but a bit more oriented to product support, or just a standard support system like Zendesk.
- Question: "There is this error in the site"
- Answer: "We have solved the bug" / "It was not a bug"
- Upvote: "I am affected by this error too" / "I think this is an important error"
- Downvote: "This is not actually an error" / "I am okay with how it works currently"
- Shortcomings: No tracking information for the bug about the actual awareness of the company, the status (investigating/accepted/rejected/...) or the planned action. No ability to "watch" or "subscribe" to issue updates. Answer comes at the end of the resolution process.
- Alternative: Issue tracking system with votes.
- Question: "I want this to change on the site"
- Answer: "We will do that" / "We will not do that"
- Upvote: "I want this too"
- Downvote: "I do not want this"
- Shortcomings: Similar to bugs.
- Alternative: Issue tracking system with votes.
- Question: "What do you think of this"
- Answer: "This is my opinion on this"
- Upvote: "I agree with it" / "I think this is an interesting discussion"
- Downvote: "I do not agree with this" / "This is not an interesting discussion"
- Shortcomings: Opinions are scattered around comments and answers. No ability to have more extended discussion, following different threads. Impractical unstructured streams of comments. For things like burnination, no clear information on progress or outcome resulting from the discussion. Not clear when the discussion is considered "closed".
- Alternative: Forum / Discourse / ???
Company announcements
This are under discussion (e.g. this) but I think they are quite different.
- Question: "See this we wanted to tell you"
- Answer: "This is what I think of this announcement"
- Upvote: "I like this"
- Downvote: "I do not like this"
- Shortcomings: Unclear what the purpose of answers are here, or whether they are different from comments besides extension. Unclear why this is presented here and not in the blog. Downvotes not very useful by themselves (better say what exactly you do not like and why).
- Alternative: Blog with comments / Reddit-like / ...
This is all my view and understanding, of course, which may be wrong in many things. But I think most people would agree that there are at least some things that just do not fit very well in meta Q/A. Why the insistence in fitting everything in here, then? Well, if I know one thing about meta users is that they like their Q/A, so why shoehorn it into everything, as some kind of Swiss army knife of communication, so you can use the same mechanics we have come to love appreciate to deal with every problem in the world. It also concentrates about all things SO into a single site.
I am not saying this or that would be the better, but I think there is diversity about what each of the mechanics mean for each user in meta. Maybe it is okay to stick Q/A into everything, but maybe there should be more guidance about what one should expect in each case, specially if meta wants to attract more users and become more representative of the community. I personally am a relatively seasoned SO user (mostly answering, not in moderation) and I still feel there is something of a barrier to entry in meta.
[bug]
being downvoted might mean the community doesn't think it's important.