Although I'm tempted to suggest banning the phrase ["not working"](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/271089/recognise-not-working-and-suggest-improvement-to-user) it's obvious that this is not a solution to the problem of people asking questions that are ridiculously thin on details or otherwise fail to speak in terms specific enough to be answered. People who post questions like "Help, my program isn't working" and fail to provide much more in the way of details are often new Stack Overflow visitors and they get severely punished with down votes or have their question almost immediately flagged for closing or deletion. This can make the Stack Overflow crowd seem like a bunch of thugs that are quick to lay the smackdown on anyone who doesn't live up to our standards even when the goal is to try and maintain a level of quality both in questions and answers. Instead of down-voting, could people be given an option to "recommend improvement" where a few things could be flagged from a list? Giving people concrete goals like "Include a small sample of code to illustrate what you've done to try and solve the problem" or "Include the specific error message you're getting" should go a long way towards explaining what the problems are. Being able to flag one or more of these in a kind, encouraging way would help with first impressions.