What Goes into a Project Charter?
A project charter defines and formally launches a project. What information goes into one? What level of detail is best? Here are my tips for what a project charter should do.
- Authorize the project for a smooth launch. Primarily, a project charter ensures the project is authorized, so money and effort can be expended. A brief announcement email might suffice. Or significant detail could be required, depending on the organization’s norms. Include the information your organization requires for project authorization, so you can launch the project without issues.
- Inform and engage stakeholders to obtain resources. Resources are often in short supply. Managers want to assign the right people for the job. Include the information that helps managers identify who to assign as team members for your project. This information often includes required technical skills, preliminary project timeframes, funding sources, estimated project milestones, and the project priority within the organization’s work portfolio.
- Obtain funds. A sponsor’s project approval may not be enough to release project funds. The project charter must contain information required by the finance organization. This can include internal and external resourcing needs, whether existing or new vendor contracts will be used to obtain skilled resources, cash flow projections, and other cost and business case details.
- Define responsibility/authority. Projects require a shared understanding of the responsibilities of the project manager, sponsor, and other key stakeholders. In some organizations, these roles are pre-defined across all projects. In others, responsibilities can change based on project context, and the management level from which the project is managed. The project charter should include details of assigned authority, accountability and decision-making processes.
- Assumptions, risks, constraints, and other details. Organizations often have specific information they require in a charter, for example, a regulatory requirement that mandates a project deadline. Be sure to identify the unique industry expectations your organization and management team have regarding a charter.
An effective project charter can vary wildly –from a verbal assurance by a senior leader, to an informal email, or a detailed multi-page document. Follow the guidelines above as a start. If you vary from your organization’s typical charter, include more detail versus less. An effective charter gets your project off to a good start – and that’s the first step to successfully completing your project.
Here’s a great resource for project management templates.