The bounty system does bring more views to bountied questions. On average, Stack Overflow questions get 1455 views. Bountied questions average 2631. It stands to reason that the more people who see a question, the better the odds it will get a quality answer.
To test that, I divided all answers into three groups:
- All answers whether their question has been bountied or not (the control),
- Answers that arrived before the bounty (
before
), and
- Answers that arrived after the bounty (
after
).
Since questions can have multiple bounties, an answer might belong to all three groups. A slightly cleaner test would only look at questions with just one bounty.
Score is our usual method of determining quality. The query is based on public data and I've included deleted posts.
group |
N |
avg_score |
bountied_rate |
accepted_rate |
before |
112270 |
18.8 |
0.122 |
0.123 |
after |
388660 |
2.9 |
0.259 |
0.243 |
control |
26548476 |
2.3 |
0.004 |
0.306 |
Despite the extra attention, answers posted after the bounty are barely better scored than answers in general. Existing answers get most of the voting benefit of being featured. It seems entirely possible that this is a result of the reward existing answer bounty reason. But new answers are more than twice as likely (26%) to receive a bounty as existing answers (12%).
The odds an answer will be accepted has more to do with the total number of other answers to the question than it's actual quality. So let's look at questions instead:
group |
N |
avg_score |
avg_max_score |
avg_bounties |
accept_rate |
avg_views |
bounty |
161510 |
2.8 |
9.45 |
1.022 |
0.658 |
4536 |
control |
14181661 |
1.5 |
3.26 |
N/A |
0.572 |
2242 |
Questions that have been bountied get higher scoring answers on average. And the highest scoring answer is also markedly higher on average. But as I mentioned above, that could be a function of the greater number of views. There is an increase in accept rate among questions that have been bountied. The surprising thing is how many questions get multiple bounties:
bounties |
N |
answers |
avg_score |
avg_max_score |
accept_rate |
avg_views |
0 |
14020151 |
2 |
1.5 |
3.2 |
0.571 |
2214 |
1 |
158289 |
3 |
2.7 |
8.3 |
0.659 |
4269 |
2 |
2979 |
4.5 |
5.8 |
46.1 |
0.574 |
14550 |
3 |
182 |
7 |
12.9 |
189 |
0.555 |
48050 |
4 |
35 |
10.5 |
13.5 |
166.5 |
0.714 |
72940 |
5 |
15 |
6.1 |
7.6 |
25.6 |
0.467 |
5346 |
6 |
4 |
12 |
30.8 |
417.5 |
0.25 |
127626 |
7 |
3 |
14.7 |
36.8 |
392.3 |
1 |
96343 |
10 |
1 |
5 |
63.8 |
170 |
1 |
46912 |
13 |
1 |
40 |
28.4 |
430 |
1 |
67442 |
14 |
1 |
97 |
444.2 |
26940 |
1 |
1135600 |
I venture to guess that a question really isn't getting better answers after it's first bounty. Every measure of quality except accept rate increases with multiple bounties.
Summary
Bounties certainly increase attention (as designed). There is some indication that a single bounty also increases answer quality, but multiple bounties probably don't increase anything but attention. I'm only looking at Stack Overflow, but spot checks other sites show similar results.