On the Ask A Question page, the user is presented with a bullet pointed list. I would propose adding one more bullet point, explicitly telling users to check in on their questions. Something along these lines:
Stay around for a while.
New questions tend to get the most attention. After you post, stay on the site, or check back often. Other users may ask you for more information that will help you get your answer faster!
Fairly often, especially with newer users, I see questions posted that aren't complete as written, but also aren't unrecoverable. They just need additional information that only the OP can provide. This prompts questions in the comments section, of course, as it should.
If those questions go unanswered for long enough, and "long enough" varies with the mood of the community, the question has a pretty good chance of getting closed for "Needs more detail." Unfortunately, I don't have examples handy, but I've seen potentially workable questions closed in under fifteen minutes. Generally, in the tagosphere I spend time in, half an hour or an hour is about all one can hope for before the close votes pile up, during the work day hours in North America. That timeline is longer at night (in North America) and over the weekend.
The time frame undoubtedly varies by tag, so there's no way to suggest any specifics for how often to check in, but it seems worthwhile to convey some sense of urgency to stay on top of your question for "a while". And it makes sense (to me) to phrase it in a way that seems beneficial to the user, without getting into the whole "your question's going to get closed" thing.
Now, yes, the user could come back and make the needed edits to a closed question, and then hope against hope for three reopen votes, and then hope again that somebody will come back to their reopened question and answer it. Might happen.
But it would be a better experience for all concerned if the OP would just stay handy, make the needed edits in real time, and get their answer.
Would this be any kind of a "cure all"? Of course not. But I'm not sure that users, and, again, especially new users, appreciate just how fast their question might end up in the dust heap, and adding a bullet point to the sidebar is fairly low effort and low cost.