The Difference Between a Content Plan and a Marketing Strategy (And Why You Need Both)

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If you’ve ever spent a Sunday night mapping out your Instagram posts for the week and thought, “okay, I have a plan,” I need you to stay with me for a second.

Because there’s a really good chance you’ve been doing one thing but calling it another, and that mix-up is responsible for a lot of the burnout, inconsistency, and “why isn’t this working” frustration I see female founders carrying around.

I’ve been a marketing strategist for six years. I’ve worked with service providers, course creators, coaches, and educators across the online space and the number one thing I see holding them back isn’t their content. 

It’s that they have a content plan where a marketing strategy should be.

First, Let’s Define Both (Without the Jargon)

Here’s the simplest way I know to explain this:

A marketing strategy is your why and your what

It’s the foundation. It answers the big questions (who you’re talking to, what you want them to think and feel about your brand, which platforms make sense for your business, how your offers connect, and what you’re actually trying to accomplish over the next quarter or year)

→ Your marketing strategy is what makes everything feel intentional instead of random. It’s the reason behind every caption you write, every email you send, every story you post.

A content plan is your when and your how

It’s the execution layer. It’s the calendar, the topics, the formats, the posting schedule. It’s how your strategy actually shows up in the world on a week-to-week, month-to-month basis. 

→ A content plan without a strategy is just a to-do list. A strategy without a content plan is just a very good Google Doc that never goes anywhere.

You need both… they’re not interchangeable!

Why Most Founders Have One But Not the Other

Here’s what I see happen most often: a founder starts her business, opens Canva, figures out a posting schedule, and calls it a marketing strategy. She’s consistent for a while, and then it stops feeling sustainable. She’s creating constantly but nothing is building. Every week feels like starting from scratch. Her content looks fine, but it doesn’t seem to be doing anything.

That’s the content plan without a strategy problem.

On the flip side, I also see founders who have done ALL the groundwork—ideal client research, brand messaging, positioning docs, the works—but they freeze when it comes to actually showing up. The strategy is beautiful and untouched in a folder somewhere. Nothing is moving because the execution layer doesn’t exist.

Neither version works alone.

What a Real Marketing Strategy Actually Includes

A lot of people think a marketing strategy is a 47-page document only a Fortune 500 company needs. Spoiler: It’s not! 

For a solopreneur or small team, a good marketing strategy is really just a clear answer to five things:

  1. Who you’re talking to: Not “women who love entrepreneurship.” A real person with a real problem you know how to solve.
  1. What you want to be known for: What’s the one thing you want someone to think of when your name comes up? Your marketing strategy exists to create that association, over and over and over.
  1. Which platforms actually make sense for your business: Not the ones you feel like you should be on. The ones where your ideal client actually is and the ones you can show up on consistently without running yourself into the ground.
  1. How your content connects to your offers: This is the part most people skip. Your content isn’t just for visibility, it’s for building a path that leads somewhere. Your strategy should map that path.
  1. What success looks like for you: Not someone else’s metrics. Yours. What numbers, outcomes, and feelings tell you your marketing is working?

That’s the foundation. Everything else gets built on top of it.

What a Content Plan Actually Includes

Once your strategy is in place, your content plan is where it comes to life. A good content plan includes:

  • Your content pillars: the themes and topics you return to consistently (mine are integrated marketing, sustainable visibility, content planning, solopreneur wellness, and lived experience storytelling)
  • Your platform cadence: how often you’re posting where, and in what format
  • Your monthly or weekly content calendar: what you’re actually creating and when
  • Your repurposing plan: how one piece of content becomes five without you starting from scratch every time
  • Your content-to-offer connection: which pieces of content point to which offers or freebies at any given time

A content plan is what makes your strategy repeatable. It takes the big vision and turns it into something you can actually do on a Tuesday morning with an iced chai in hand.

The Real Reason This Matters: Between-Launch Marketing

Here’s something I talk about a lot with my clients that most marketing educators gloss over entirely: what you do between launches matters just as much as the launches themselves.

Everyone teaches you how to sprint. How to build the runway, warm up your audience, launch, close cart. And that’s valuable! 

But then the launch ends and most founders just… stop. They go quiet or they start to hustle for the next thing. And then they have to re-warm an audience that’s gone cold because nothing was happening in the meantime.

A marketing strategy with a consistent content plan is how you never go cold.

It’s the difference between being someone your audience checks in on every week because they genuinely want to know what you’re going to say and being someone they forget about until the next time your launch emails hit their inbox and they think, “oh right, her”

Launch strategies teach you how to sprint. I teach you how to jog. And the foundation of jogging? Is knowing exactly where you’re going (strategy) and having a pace you can sustain (content plan).

How to Know Which One You’re Actually Missing

Quick gut check… which of these sounds more like you?

You might be missing a marketing strategy if:

  • Your content feels scattered or inconsistent in message even when you’re posting regularly
  • You’re not sure which platforms are actually worth your time
  • You feel like you’re just talking into the void with no clear goal
  • Your content doesn’t seem to be moving people toward your offers
  • Every new content trend sends you into a spiral because you don’t have a strong enough foundation to filter it through

You might be missing a content plan if:

  • You have clarity on your brand and message but freeze when it comes to actually creating
  • You go through phases of being “on” and then disappearing for weeks
  • You’re always starting from scratch instead of building on what you’ve already made
  • You know what to say but don’t have a system for when and how often
  • You have ideas everywhere but no organized place to put them

Most people reading this will see themselves in both lists, which is completely normal. Building both isn’t a one-time project, it’s an ongoing practice.

Where to Start (If You’re Starting From Scratch)

If you don’t have either in place yet, always build your strategy first. You can’t create a content plan worth anything without a foundation to build it on. Starting with a content calendar before you have a strategy is like decorating a house before you’ve laid the foundation. It looks nice for a minute, and then it falls apart.

Here’s a simple sequence:

Step 1: Define your strategy foundation

Get clear on your who, your what, your where, and your why. If you want a structured place to do this, I built Marketing Brief for exactly this moment! It’s a $17 Google Doc template that walks you through mapping your entire strategy foundation in one sitting.

Step 2: Build your content pillars

Identify 4–6 topics that live at the intersection of your expertise and your ideal client’s questions. These become the filter for everything you create.

Step 3: Choose your platforms and cadence

Less is more here! I would rather you show up consistently on just one or two platforms than sporadically on five.

Step 4: Create your content calendar

Once the above is in place, building a calendar becomes actually easy. You’re not starting from scratch every week, you’re just pulling from the plan you’ve already built. Marketing HQ is my $47 Google Sheet system for exactly this step if you want something pre-built.

Step 5: Build in your repurposing loop

One long-form piece of content per week. Repurpose it across platforms. That’s the whole sustainable system.

The Bottom Line

A content plan and a marketing strategy aren’t the same thing, and you can’t fully replace one with the other. Your strategy is the map. Your content plan is how you actually make the trip.

The founders I see building genuine, sustainable momentum—the ones who show up consistently and feel good about it—aren’t the ones creating the most content. They’re the ones who took the time to build the foundation first and then let the content plan do its job on top of it.

💭 Ready to build your strategy foundation?

Grab The Marketing Brief: a $17 fill-in-the-blank Google Doc that helps you map out your entire marketing strategy in one sitting. 

💻 Already have your strategy?

Marketing HQ is the $47 Google Sheet system that turns it into a content plan you can actually follow.

Hey! I’m Kelly

After 10+ years in the industry (and plenty of “why is this so hard?” moments), I’ve created a different way to market your business—one that puts your goals, energy, and capacity first.

My signature approach blends strategy with systems, structure with softness, and marketing with a lot more ease. I’m here to help you grow your business in a way that works for you because sustainable marketing starts with a plan you’ll actually want to follow.


Content & marketing strategist // at-home spa night enthusiast // YOUR go-to girl for when marketing starts to feel like too much.