Some people go a bit [over the top](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/252740/2888561) downvoting. It isn't exactly welcoming to new users. My process is this:

Is it a good question? Upvote. If not:
1. Spam? Flag. Otherwise:
2. *Very* obviously bad? Are you sure? OK, GOTO 5. Otherwise:
3. Looks hard to answer (code-wall, terrible formatting, etc.)? Leave a comment on how to improve.
    - Can I improve it myself?
        - Will it save it? Edit, otherwise GOTO 5.
    - No? You're not trying hard enough. Tried harder? Good. Fine, you can GOTO 5.
4. Off topic? Close vote, comment.
5. VLQ. Deserves downvote? Downvote.

Only after considering commenting (so OP can *learn*) and editing (to save a potentially good question) do I downvote. Why? Because downvotes discourage users. It basically says "Your question is bad ([and you should feel bad](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jG2KMkQLZmI)) - nobody should bother reading it". It makes new users feel unwelcome, so they naturally (and partially correctly) assume that we **want** them to feel bad.

> Poorly written question? Down vote and move on.

^ This is such disrespectful behavior. Some people forget that there's a human being on the other end of the Internet who may not be fluent in English. Or the programming language. Or they might not understand Stack Exchange. (All can be forgiven, and eventually corrected.)

I believe that others should do the same as me - try to help, not discourage. 99 out of 100 users have potential, it is up to us to make them feel like using it.

What do you think about this? Can something be done about excessive downvoting?

<sub>I should note that I don't think downvoting is evil or anything. Downvoting is essential to the functioning of the site, and there are plenty of posts that deserve downvoting. I am complaining about overuse, not normal use of downvoting. And I also think a complaint about *underuse* of downvoting is just as valid.</sub>