Financial Planning vs Strategic Planning
You hire a senior manager. Six months in, it's clear it isn't working. You manage the exit, restart the search, pay the agency fee again, and lose another three months to onboarding.

Two Plans. Two Purposes. One Outcome.
Many businesses confuse financial planning with strategic planning. They are connected - but not interchangeable.
Strategic Planning: Setting Direction
Strategic planning defines:
- Markets to enter
- Products to prioritize
- Competitive positioning It answers where and why.
Financial Planning: Testing Reality
Financial planning answers:
- Can we afford this strategy?
- When will cash be required?
- What risks threaten sustainability? Optimism without financial grounding is not strategy.
Where Businesses Go Wrong
Common gaps include:
- Strategy without cash planning
- Forecasts without market logic
- Targets without execution reviews Harvard Business Review notes that execution gaps cause most strategic failures.
When the Two Work Together
The strongest businesses:
- Use forecasts to validate strategy
- Review plans quarterly
- Adjust assumptions, not direction WEchartered bridges this gap by aligning forecasting, compliance, and capital planning with long-term strategy.
The Takeaway
Strategy defines ambition. Financial planning ensures survival. Growth demands both.
Let’s align strategy with numbers that actually work if you’re not sure whether your plans are financially realistic.

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