In line with the abandoned rule proposal, I suggest the implementation of a "Post Notice" question banner in the style of the "Close Vote" banner, visible only to question authors, answerers, and moderators, instructing users about their prerogative to accept an answer.
The text would look something like this, made to dovetail with the "What should I do when someone answers my question?" help page, but I'm not married to this specific text at all:
Your question has an answer! Once you consider your problem to be solved, you can accept an answer by clicking on the checkmark next to it. You can also vote on the answer once you earn the vote up privilege.
I've mocked it up here:
Motivation
- Question askers don't know what to do after they receive a helpful answer, as noted by the "thanks!" or "+1" comments and lack of answer acceptance. Those unnecessary comments need moderation.
- Question answerers can't see or don't trust the other nudges (which seem to just be tooltips and tour right now). As far as anyone can tell, nothing on the question page gives the user any instruction how to respond to the answer. The reputation system and post-answer options work differently on the Stack Exchange network than on other services like Reddit, so it's reasonable to guess that a new asker wouldn't know what to do.
- The impulse to teach new users how the site works can result in "accept an answer" suggestions that seem self-serving or condescending, especially when posted by an answerer in their own question comments. Even the most appropriate of those comments eventually need moderation too.
- The suggestion to accept doesn't really benefit anyone other than the question asker, so nobody else needs to read it. For other readers, it's just noise.
Advantages
- Authority: The suggestion comes from the system, not one given user.
- Auto-Moderation: The suggestion is not a comment in the comment system, and it disappears automatically if the answerer takes action. The message could even be hidden automatically after a certain time period.
- Appropriateness: The suggestion can be shown only to users who have never accepted an answer, and only on non-closed non-duplicate questions.
- Approved text: The text can be carefully reviewed and approved, and updated all at once if it needs revision. Comments can't be updated like that.
- Answerer visibility: Because the answerers can see the post notice too, they can verify that the user has already been suggested to accept, and will be less inclined to provide that help themselves. This reduces the moderation comment count and post noise, as the May 2022 rule proposal/announcement was intended to do.
Potential problems
- Proliferation: This is another post notice, like a lock message or close message. If these proliferate, it can push the content much further down the page.
- Private notice: Other users and answerers can't see the notice, so there's no way to tell whether the user was nudged or not.
- Prejudice: Answerers can tell whether the user is eligible or not. They might put less effort into curating their answers for users who were nudged (less "ROI" for folks who care about rep), or might be more tempted to post a comment if they see that the system does not nudge the user.
- Prioritization: This would require SE code changes, so it may fall down the priority list. Moderation rules can be changed immediately without changing SE engineer priorities.
Related
- May 2022: Rule proposal: comments asking for accepts and votes shall no longer be allowed
- October 2019: New Post Notices rollout on Stack Overflow
- December 2015: Encourage users to accept answers
- August 2014: What should we do when there is absolutely nil responses/comments to a question with answers?
- April 2014: Dealing with an answer that wasn't accepted (maybe because a user is a newbie on Stack Overflow)
X
or something more explicit like "I'm not satisfied with the answer(s)"), there will be no need for a time-based dismissal. Then, whether or not the system should re-show the notice if the question gets another answer may be discussed. On one hand, it's a reminder because the OP technically still never accepted an answer before, but on the other hand, it might come off as a little pushy.