A strategic plan defines an organization’s long-term direction, priorities, and high-level goals, typically over a multi-year horizon. While it articulates mission alignment, competitive positioning, and major initiatives, it must also be translated into actionable steps. For this reason, strategic plans include or are supported by operational plans , which outline how the strategy will be executed in practice. Operational plans define timelines, responsibilities, resource allocation, performance metrics, and specific initiatives that move the organization toward its strategic objectives. In healthcare leadership and information systems governance, operational planning ensures that broad goals—such as digital transformation, quality improvement, or cost reduction—are implemented through concrete projects and workflows.
In contrast, budget requests and financial projections may support strategic planning but are financial management tools rather than core structural components of the strategic plan itself. Policies and procedures are detailed governance documents that guide daily operations; they support compliance and consistency but are not defining elements of a strategic plan.
Thus, operational plans are the key component that connects high-level strategy to day-to-day execution, making option A the correct answer.