What a new user needs on Stack Overflow, and a home page is one way to support implementations of that, is:

- tracking of the progress the newbie makes with understanding Stack Overflow rather unique concepts
- use of that tracked progress to be better guided to avoid the many typical newbie mistakes
- use of that tracked progress to be better guided to contribute to the goals of Stack Overflow
- benefit of that by reducing the impression of toxic Stack Overflow (the impression, I am not saying Stack Overflow is)
- gamification of the learning progress; feats, badges, challenges, displayed prominently on their homepage
  - "Your privilege to express gratitude for helpful posts is just a few helpful edits away"
  - take the guided tour to create your own follow-up question (safely in a simulator or the real thing)"
  - "ten clear steps to make your own well-received homework-related question"
  - "see the world of sibling sites, e.g., for having your working code reviewed for potential improvement"
- investing in that learning progress, as a treat, an incentive, to spend the effort of learning. E.g. "Welcome to Stack Overflow, and thank you for creating an account. You are eligible for a free class of excellent contribution to the goals of Stack Overflow; at your own university, your city or online at your home". Or maybe only the least expensive one online...


For example:
>You are creating your first answer post. But from your phrasing, it seems that what you actually want to do is say 'thanks', 'me too', or to ask a different question, even if a direct follow-up. Would you like help with doing one of those things in the Stack Overflow way?

(Sorry for the clippy vibe. I only spot the lack of guidance, while myself being not very gifted in providing it.)

And later in progress:  
>Thanks for creating another answer post, but after successfully doing so a few years ago, some time has passed, and it seems that the new post is not on the same level of quality. Instead, it seems to rather be a new separate question.  
Would you like to review the guide on creating an answer in contrast to a question, or the guide to create your own follow-up question which refers to this one?  
We know that the 'Ask Question' button is rather unobviously hidden at the top right of the page, while the 'Post Your Answer' button is the most inviting after reading through a page. So this is the offer to help you make the best use of it for your purpose.

The precise implementation of this (few false positives and false negatives...) could be based on the many ingenious bots used in moderation chat rooms (e.g. SOBotics) and of course could be an excellent way to leverage the new commitment to using AI in a user-friendly and helpful way.

If this leads to a change of the common meme "Stack Overflow is toxic to newbies" to "Stack Overflow is very good at helping newbies to find great help, as long as they log in", then several benefits could be harvested with one (admittedly huge) change.

Most successful to make that change of meme would be hearsay, after people found out about it.  

It might however be worth to contact some education institutions (university lectors/professors, anything offering programming courses ...).  
The current impression that students get bad advice there on how to (mis-)use Stack Overflow could be turned around to students getting recommendations to create an account, log in and use the guidance. Currently, they seem to be told to expect toxicity and how to (unhelpfully) try to deal with it (Oh hello September, you seem somewhat early this year...).  

I could go into details of observable behaviour... but I think that is unneeded here for several reasons. Anybody really concerned about the experience new users have is already aware of them.