Few have the strength to fly it on a green and stop it so they are almost always playing a ground game.
This requires thought and placement of most shots. They also take care to avoid bunkers in their strategy because they lack the strength to play out of deeper ones.
Most women don't hit it far enough to hit it off the course so they lower their scores by learning to plan shots and place the ball accordingly.
Yes Jeff! This is so close to the mark, insofar as we can make any kind of generalizations about golfers based on gender. When it comes down to it, what matters isn't gender per se but the skills a golfer has and what she does with them.
Imagine if your best driver goes 150 yards, and your mishits go more like 120. Depending on the placement of the tees, that can really change the strategic options for your play. That fairway bunker might be out of reach. Maybe it has to be tacked around. Maybe it's shallow enough that you can count on a low-trajectory shot just skipping right through it!
Now consider how the trajectory of your short irons and wedges affects your play. If your seven iron is only good for ninety yards and doesn't get much higher than 20 feet, and your wedge shots always roll five to ten yards, that really affects your game around the green. Lobbing the ball over a 30 yard carry to a tight pin just isn't an option! Given those kinds of skills, the thoughtful golfer will embrace the ground game and plan her routing accordingly, while her thoughtless competitor will be getting a lot of sand practice - except when she gets lucky blithely skipping her shots through the bunkers.
I don't know, it's so hard to make generalizations. I think women are just as likely as men to employ strategy (or not). What's really interesting is considering what kinds of strategy you would use based on your skills. The skills you have will pretty much define your strategic options. In this day and age, most women will hit the ball shorter and lower than most men, which should account for most of the different strategies you see on the course.
Oh, one last thing. I think using strategy depends on how consistent you are in your play. Like, if you're 90% to drive the ball straight, but only 140 yards, you can probably employ strategic planning more successfully than if you bomb it 200 yards but only hit the fairway a third of the time. If you can get that 90-yard 7-iron consistently straight, you'll likely enjoy lower scoring than the player who can hit her wedge high but with a larger dispersion pattern.
Last season I really got a lesson in this. I played another woman 20 years my senior, who hit the ball shorter and lower than me, but with much greater accuracy! She missed only one fairway all day, and reached all but three greens in regulation. She was almost always in better position than me. No wonder she shot par and beat me by six strokes!
It's a lot easier to strategize when you can count on what kind of a shot you're likely to hit.