Project Charter Templates
Three project charter frameworks for different initiative types — Simple Project Charter, IT or Software Project, and Strategic Initiative — each designed to get executive alignment before a single hour is spent.
Simple Project Charter
Best for: internal projects, team initiatives, or any project under 3 months in duration
Document Header
Project Charter: [Project Name] | Date: [Date] | Version: [1.0]
Project Purpose
This project exists to [solve specific problem or achieve specific outcome] for [beneficiary]. Without this project, [consequence of inaction].
Scope
In scope: [list what is included]
Out of scope: [list what is explicitly excluded]
Stakeholders & Roles
• Project Sponsor: [Name, Title] — approves scope changes, owns budget
• Project Manager: [Name] — day-to-day execution and reporting
• Key Team Members: [Names and roles]
• External Stakeholders: [Clients, vendors, or departments impacted]
Success Criteria & Budget
Success is defined as: [measurable outcomes]. Project budget: [$X]. Target completion: [Date].
Signatures
Project Sponsor: ________________ Project Manager: ________________
IT / Software Project Charter
Best for: technology projects, software implementations, system migrations, and digital transformations
Document Header
IT Project Charter: [System / Initiative Name] | Requested By: [Department] | Priority: [High / Medium]
Technical Scope
Systems affected: [list systems]. Integrations required: [APIs, databases, third-party tools]. Data migration: [Yes / No — describe scope]. Security classification: [level].
Assumptions & Dependencies
Assumes: [key assumptions such as vendor availability, existing infrastructure, team capacity]. Depends on: [other projects or decisions that must be completed first].
Risk Register (Top 3)
• Risk 1: [Description] | Likelihood: [H/M/L] | Impact: [H/M/L] | Mitigation: [plan]
• Risk 2: [Description] | Likelihood: [H/M/L] | Impact: [H/M/L] | Mitigation: [plan]
• Risk 3: [Description] | Likelihood: [H/M/L] | Impact: [H/M/L] | Mitigation: [plan]
Strategic Initiative Charter
Best for: cross-functional initiatives, new market entry, major product pivots, or strategic transformation programs
Document Header
Strategic Initiative Charter: [Initiative Name] | Executive Sponsor: [C-Level Name] | Fiscal Year: [Year]
Strategic Alignment
This initiative directly supports [company strategic goal] by [specific mechanism]. Expected contribution to company OKR: [specific KR and target].
Business Case & ROI
Investment required: [$X headcount + $Y tools/services]. Expected return: [revenue, cost savings, or strategic value] within [timeframe]. Break-even: [month/quarter].
Governance & Reporting
Steering committee: [members and meeting cadence]. Progress reporting: [monthly executive dashboard]. Decision escalation path: [PM → Sponsor → Steering Committee].
How to Use These Templates
Complete before work starts
A charter created after work has already begun is just documentation. The value comes from forcing clarity on scope, ownership, and success criteria before anyone spends a single hour.
Get signatures from all key stakeholders
A charter without sign-off is a wish list. Executive signature commits resources and creates accountability. Get it before the kickoff meeting, not after.
Be explicit about what is out of scope
The "out of scope" section prevents more problems than any other part of the charter. If stakeholders want it added later, it becomes a formal change request.
Reference it throughout the project
Review the charter at every major milestone. When scope creep requests come in, evaluate them against the original charter. It is your decision-making anchor.
Customize in Dewx
Inside Dewx, tell Dew: "Create a project charter for [project name]. The goal is [outcome], budget is [$X], and the deadline is [date]. Stakeholders are [names]." Dew generates the full charter, creates the project in CX Hub, assigns tasks, and sets up weekly automated status reports for all stakeholders.
Related Templates
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a project charter and why do you need one?
A project charter is the founding document that officially authorizes a project. It defines the project's purpose, scope, objectives, stakeholders, and success criteria. Without a charter, projects suffer from scope creep, unclear ownership, and misaligned expectations. A signed charter gives the project manager authority to use resources and signals executive commitment.
What is the difference between a project charter and a project plan?
A project charter is the high-level authorization document created before work begins. It answers: what, why, who, and what does success look like? A project plan is the detailed execution roadmap created after the charter is approved. It answers: how, when, and at what cost? The charter comes first and shapes everything in the plan.
Who should sign off on a project charter?
The project sponsor (the executive or stakeholder with budget authority) and the project manager should both sign the charter. For larger projects, key stakeholders or department heads whose teams will be affected should also sign. Executive sign-off transforms a proposal into an authorized, resourced initiative.
How does Dewx help with project management?
Dewx CX Hub manages your entire project lifecycle. Dew can draft project charters, create task breakdowns, assign team members, set milestones, and generate weekly status reports. The Portal keeps all project communications in one inbox so nothing gets lost across email, Slack, and client messages. Dew monitors progress and flags risks before they become problems.
Projects, Fully Managed
Simple, Transparent Pricing
Starting at $29/mo for solopreneurs. $79/mo for teams. All features included.
View pricingStart Every Project Right
Dew drafts your charter, creates the project plan, assigns tasks, and keeps stakeholders updated automatically.
Try Dewx FreeStop Projects From Going Off the Rails
Dewx creates your project charter, manages execution, and keeps every stakeholder aligned — from kickoff to delivery. Dew monitors progress and flags issues before they become problems.