Marketing strategy and marketing plan are often used as if they mean the same thing. They don't. Confusing them is one reason businesses end up with long plans that still don't create clearer decisions.
A strategy decides the direction and logic. A plan organises the work. Both matter, but they solve different problems.
Strategy answers why and where
A marketing strategy should explain why the business expects growth to happen and where focus should go. It should define the audience, positioning, commercial constraint, channel roles and decision criteria.
It doesn't need to be complicated. It does need to be specific enough to guide choices.
Planning answers what, when and who
A marketing plan translates strategy into activity: campaigns, content, website improvements, email journeys, tests, responsibilities, timings and budgets.
The plan is where execution becomes organised. But if the strategy is weak, the plan can look professional while still being commercially vague.
Tactics answer how
Tactics are the specific methods: a paid search campaign, an email flow, a landing page test, a guide, a product page rewrite or a lead magnet.
Tactics are useful when they serve the strategy. They become distracting when the business chooses them because they sound current, familiar or easy to buy.
A good plan should reveal the strategy
If someone reads the marketing plan, they should be able to understand the thinking behind it. Why these channels? Why this audience? Why this sequence? Why these measures?
If the plan can't answer those questions, it may be a schedule rather than a strategy-led plan.