According to the PMBOK® Guide, specifically the Develop Project Charter process, the project charter is the document that formally authorizes the existence of a project and provides the project manager with the authority to apply organizational resources to project activities.
During meetings to develop this document, the focus is on high-level strategic alignment rather than granular tactical details. The three correct elements discussed are:
Project Objectives (C): These are the measurable goals the project is intended to achieve. Meetings with stakeholders are crucial to ensure that the project ' s purpose is clearly defined and aligned with the business case and strategic goals of the organization.
Success Criteria (D): Stakeholders must agree on what constitutes project success. This includes defining the measurable standards (such as KPIs, quality levels, or specific business outcomes) that will be used to determine if the project has met its objectives upon completion.
High-level Deliverables (A): The charter outlines the main products, services, or results that the project will produce. While a detailed Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) comes later during planning, the " big picture " deliverables must be identified in the charter to define the project ' s boundaries.
Analysis of other options:
Phase transitions (Option B): Discussions regarding how to move from one phase to another (Kill Points or Stage Gates) are typically part of the Project Management Plan or the Project Life Cycle definition during the planning phase, not the initial chartering process.
Cost (Option E): While a High-level Budget or " Summary Budget " is included in a charter, " Cost " (the detailed estimation of all resources and activities) is a specific output of the Determine Budget process during planning. The charter deals with the " order of magnitude " funding, while detailed costs are discussed much later.
Per PMI standards, the meetings held during the initiation phase are designed to capture the Sponsor’s vision, define Project Objectives, and establish Success Criteria to ensure all key stakeholders are in agreement before the project moves into detailed planning.