Project Charter

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A project charter is defined as a statement of scope, objectives, and participants in a project. [1] It can be used in project management to sell the project to stakeholders since the charter is created at the beginning of a project. In recent years the project charter has become more conspicuous and people are understanding more how important it is to use it. On the other hand, the charter is still underestimated as a deliverable in project management and many experts in program and portfolio management are not giving it enough attention. This tool is important in project management as it can prevent project failures and can assist in choosing the right projects for organizations. [2]

A project charter provides a fundamental project description and is used to formally authorize the project. [3]

In the following article, the definition of a project charter will be introduced and its benefits. Guidelines will be represented on how to develop it and what contents are preferable, along with its limitations. Lastly, references will be listed after the article for further reading.


Contents

Big Idea

Guidelines How to Develop a Project Charter

The process of developing a project charter is divided into three main steps; Inputs, Tools & Techniques and Outputs. In the following sections, these steps will be explained in more detail.


Figure 1: Inputs, tools and techniques, and outputs of developing a project charter.


Inputs

The inputs to develop a Project Charter are following: [4]

Project Statement of Work

Description of deliverables for a project and references three topics; business need, product scope description, and strategic plan. The project sponsor will provide the statement of work if the project is internal. On the other hand, if the project is external it will be received from the customer, in the form of a bid document or as a part of a contract. The statement of work will determine the following three topics.

  • Business need. Can be based on market demand, technological advance, legal requirement, government regulation, or environmental consideration.
  • Product scope description. Documentation of characteristics of the product, service or results the project will create, along with the connection between business need and product scope description.
  • Strategic plan. Documentation of the company’s strategic vision, goals, and objectives. In addition, it can enclose a mission statement. It is important that all projects, within the company, are aligned with their strategy.

Business Case

Required information that will give a clear idea if the project is worth doing or not. Usually, it includes the business need and the cost-benefit analysis to acknowledge boundaries in the project. When the scope and limitations have been determined the sponsor needs to approve it. The business can include market demand, organizational need, customer request, technological advance, legal requirement, ecological impacts and social need. Moreover, risks concerning these examples need to be taken into account. The project manager has the responsibility to meet the requirements that are stated by the stakeholders and make sure that the project will be as effective and efficient as possible. Throughout the project, it can be helpful to monitor the process and make sure that the project is still in the business case.

Agreements

To define the initial intentions for a project, agreements should be used. Some examples of agreements are contracts, letter of agreements, verbal- or written agreements and letters of intent.

Enterprise Environmental Factors

Factors related to enterprise environmental factor that can affect the development of a project charter are following:

  • Governmental or industry standards, or regulations
  • Organizational culture and structure
  • Marketplace conditions

Organizational Process Assets

Elements related to Organizational Process Assets that can influence the development of the project chart are following:

  • Organizational standard processes, policies, and process definitions
  • Templates
  • Historical information and lessons learned knowledge base


Tools and Techniques

The second step is to use tools and techniques. They are explained in detail here below.

Expert Judgment

An individual or a group of experts with special knowledge or training criticize the inputs. These individuals can come from different sources, for example, other units within the organization, professional and technical associations, stakeholders, project management office, and consultants.

Facilitation Techniques

The project manager will apply various methods that are within project management, like brainstorming, problem-solving and conflict resolution. This processes will help in developing the project charter.


Outputs

The output is the project charter. The project manager will allocate the project to organizational resources and has authority to use project activities. The charter will be created from the limited information that is accessible.


Preferable Contents of a Project Charter

Executive Summary

A high-level summary of reasons for creating the project and what problem it is supposed to improve. Moreover, it can contain background information and general statements about the project.

Project Purpose/Justification

It is vital to know the purpose or justification of the project and what the expected outcome of it is. This section describes the project and how it is related to the company’s business by defining the business case and business objectives. The business case will explain the need for the project and how the company will benefit from it. Analyze the logic for the business case and what effects it will have on the business. It is important to define the final goal of the project, and therefore it is vital to list the objectives for the project that are in a relation to the company’s strategy.

Project Description

This includes project objectives and success criteria, requirements, constraints, assumptions and a preliminary scope statement. It will provide a more detailed description of the project, while not concluding too many details. General information to be determined is what is the project, how will it be done and what will it achieve. It can be useful to use the SMART method to set the project objectives. The effect is that each objective will be specific, measurable and achievable within a certain time frame, and for that reason, it will be easier to monitor them. Therefore, the project manager can monitor whether the project is on the right path and whether it is more likely to be a success. If the objectives are vague and unrealistic it makes it difficult to evaluate the process of the project. It is also important to list all high-level project requirements that need to be stated by the project team, it will not be exhaustive list since the requirements can change as the project moves forward. Inputs from the project sponsor, customer, stakeholders and the project team are all taken into consideration. The project manager will deal with and determine constraints that affect people, money, time or equipment. His task is to balance these constraints, in order to have a successful project. Furthermore, all assumptions need to be identified by the project team. Finally, the preliminary scope statement is defined, which states what the project will include, describes any resource or requirement and when the project has fulfilled all of the goals. This is done with possible changes in mind because this information can change throughout the project.

Main Stakeholders

Identifying the main stakeholders of the project is crucial because you will have to report to them throughout the project and meet their expectations. It is beneficial to form a productive relationship as soon as possible between the team and the stakeholders.

Risks

Every project contains some form of risk. Risks and other potential issues that may happen in a project need to be taken into account and listed because without it, the project can derail. The project manager will address this and create a plan to solve these issues if they occur, so the team would be more ready and could reduce project delays and prevent complications.

Project Deliverables

This should provide a list of all deliverables, whether it is from the customer, project sponsor or the stakeholders. The project sponsor needs to approve the list and the team must present all changes to the project sponsor and be represented in status meetings.

Summary Milestone Schedule

All predetermined milestones in the project are listed but are subject to change throughout the project. All changes will be evaluated by the project manager.

Summary Budget

Includes the sum of all relative costs and the total budget for the project. Since the project charter is done very early in the process, the costs are likely to change when the project becomes clearer, but the charter will give a rough plan. In addition, it is crucial to run all changes by the project manager.

Project Approval Requirements

Project approval requirements will state the point when the project has reached its goal. The goal and the requirements need to be clear, decisive and should be accepted by an authorized person. At last, if the project is approved and has met all the requirements it will be signed-off by the sponsor.

Assigned Project Manager

This section will state the assigned project manager to the project, along with the responsibilities and authority level. These responsibilities can vary between organizations and projects.

Authorization

The project and all of its guidelines stated needs to be approved and signed by the project sponsor.


There are many ways to write a project charter. A document does not need to include all of these aforementioned sections to act as a project charter. It will still be a project charter even though it has different headers or does not contain all the information listed here above. The project charter can take different forms. For instance, a facile from is an e-mail or a verbal agreement. On the other hand, documentation is highly recommended to make the agreement clearer.


Limitations & Benefits

Limitations

Even though potential risks and issues are considered in project charter, nobody can predict the future, so the project manager cannot predict each complication. The teammates will rely on the project charter to manage obstacles but when a problem occurs that is not included in the charter, it can take a lot of time to solve it. Another problem occurs if the charter already has a solution to a problem, it may not be adequate to solve it and therefore the project will delay.

Benefits

The main benefit of using a project charter is well-defined project start, certain project boundaries and creates a formal record of the project. [3] The project charter can be useful because all the basic information about the project is gathered in one document. Therefore, it can help the team to see the big picture, and also help new individuals that join the project later on. Another advantage is that the charter is a project planning tool that can emphasize on good and effective communication plan, which is essential for every project and will help the team to succeed. To elaborate, it will decrease problems that occur in a relation of miscommunication and therefore save time. [5]

Organizations have the opportunity to become more mature by using a project charter to improve their project management process. First of all, the charter will support the decision on proceeding the project or not. Secondly, it will focus on organizational objectives and strategy and lastly, it can regulate the authorization and launching organizational assets. It is apparent that project charter is an important part of project management. [2]


Bibliography

Project Management Institute. (2013) A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) - Fifth edition.

Brown, A. S. (2005). The charter: selling your project. Paper presented at PMI® Global Congress 2005—North America, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Newtown Square, PA: Project Management Institute.

References

  1. https://www.projectmanager.com/blog/project-charter Project Manager. A Quick Guide to Project Charters. Retrieved 16-02-2018.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Brown, A. S. (2005). The charter: selling your project. Paper presented at PMI® Global Congress 2005—North America, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Newtown Square, PA: Project Management Institute.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Project Management Institute. (2013). A guide to the project management body of knowledge (PMBOK® Guide). 5th ed. Pennsylvania: Project Management Institute, pp. 66-72.
  4. http://www.projectmanagementdocs.com/initiating-process-group/project-charter-long.html#axzz4XoPzbU80 Project Management Docs. Project Charter (Long Version). Retrieved 15-02-2018.
  5. https://www.tutorialspoint.com/management_concepts/project_charter.htm Tutorials Point. Project Charter. Retrieved 18-02-2018.
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