Often times, new contributors to SO will phrase questions like "What is the best way to do XYZ". These questions often get closed for being 'primarily opinion-based', despite the question actually being primarily objective and the only change needed to cure the appearance of the question being "opinion-based" could be as simple as changing the title to "How do I do XYZ". SO of course allows voting on answers, so the seeking the "best" answer to a problem is clearly an inherent property the platform elicits and, in most cases, is not really a problematic aspect of the question. It just need not be stated in the question.
The site does already tell users asking question to avoid asking opinion-based questions, but I would propose this change that may greatly improve the experience for these new contributors:
- In the closing reason description for closing questions as opinion-based, ask contributors to consider whether the question is truly opinion based and that answers simply asking for the "best" should be edited rather than closed
There may also be room for the community bot to help address things like this and maybe can be more deeply integrated into the new staging grounds. Some potential obstacles may include false positives, for example "finding best fit line in a data plot" where 'best fit' is a mathematical term, not one soliciting opinions.
I feel this will help a great deal to ensuring a better experience for users of the site, especially new contributors.
Related: Rename "Primarily Opinion Based"
One primary motivator I have here is that I've noticed a group of users on Stack Overflow who seem to programmatically identify questions using such language and immediately vote to close them even though they are, really, not primarily opinion-based when the only subjective/opinion-based element to the question is simply asking for the "best" solution to their problem. Despite this, the votes to close are usually successful, which is obviously a poor experience, especially for new contributors.