The circuit you posted is too simple and might not work. It will have radio frequency changing problems.
Most electret mics need at least 1.5V (when its output level might be attenuated -3dB) and operate at only 300uA. Then with 3V - 2V= 1V across the 10k resistor, its current is 100uA and the electret mic and the base current in the transistor is 300uA which is not enough.
My FM transmitter is powered from a 9V battery and the electret mic and preamp transistor are fed from a 5V low-dropout voltage regulator. The electret mic gets about 2V for its spec'd output level. It is capacitor-coupled to a preamp transistor to boost its output level and add pre-emphasis that all FM radio stations use. Without pre-emphasis boosting high audio frequencies, the transmitter feeding an FM radio sounds muffled like an AM radio, because all FM radios have matching de-emphasis.
The preamp feeds an NPN transistor oscillator similar to your PNP one and its emitter feeds an RF power amplifier to isolate the antenna from the oscillator, so that something moving towards or away from the antenna does not change the oscillator frequency.