In my opinion, one of the best things a question include when it is similar, but not identical, to an existing questions is a *citation* of that question (so that reviewers can see that the asker is already aware of the existing question) and an explanation of *what* is different in the new question. This seems sort of obvious to me ("cite prior research" is a pretty fundamental academic principle, and since I discovered SO while in school, I guess I applied a fairly academic mindset to it), but it has [come to my attention](https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/comments/9j35u8/asking_a_question_on_stackoverflow/e6q8pji/?context=8&depth=9) that not everyone finds this self-explanatory. So I think the "Ask a Question" wizard should probably encourage *citing* existing answers, rather than simply "reviewing" them to see whether there's an exact duplicate that removes the necessity of asking a new question in the first place. This could be as simple as some verbiage on the "similar questions" page; something like: "If one of these questions is similar to yours but does not address your specific use case, please link to it in your question and explain why your question is different." Or it could be fancier. For instance, the "similar questions" page could have checkboxes for *selecting* similar questions, and then these could be auto-populated as links/descriptions in the question drafting page.