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7 Speedy Business Tips From NASCAR Driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. The stock car racing legend shares how he leads his team to the finish line.

By Kim Lachance Shandrow

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

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When Dale Earnhardt Jr. isn't tearing down the racetrack, he tweetstorms, cooks for his family, snacks on banana and mayo sandwiches and owns several businesses, too.

The 41-year-old bearded speed demon says he doesn't just slap his name on them and sit back. He gets his hands dirty.

"I like to get involved in the day-to-day management aspects, putting the right individuals in the right places where they need to be to help my businesses grow," Earnhardt told Entrepreneur.

You might know Earnhardt best as NASCAR's most popular driver, but he's also the president of JR Motorsports. He co-owns the Mooresville, N.C.-based pro race team and management company with his sister, Kelley, and American NASCAR team owner Rick Hendrick. He also owns Hammerhead Entertainment, a video production company, and Whisky River, a bar and nightclub in Charlotte.

Related: NASCAR Star Danica Patrick Takes Lyft Customers for a Ride

Sure, with more than 40 NASCAR race wins under his belt, the "Pied Piper of Daytona" is undeniably a legend on the track. But he also knows more than a thing or two about steering small businesses to success.

We chatted with Earnhardt on the phone recently about his other life in the fast lane -- as an entrepreneur. His funnyman role as Nationwide's "Water Cooler Dale," "Boss Man" and, who could forget, "Animal Whisperer Dale," also came up. (He spearheaded the auto insurance company's #WaterCoolerDale campaign, in which small-business owners entered to win ad space on his No. 88 Chevy SS racecar.)

Here are the business leadership tips Dale Earnhardt Jr. brought to the finish line for us, in his own words. Note that his comments were lightly edited for clarity and length.

Related: 7 Lessons From NASCAR That Helped Me Quit Worrying and Love Stress

1. Get to know your employees and build trust.

"Make great friendships. Just like the sponsors I work with, the people who work for me are more than a contract and a sheet of paper. I make it convenient and easy and enjoyable to build relationships with them that will last well beyond working together. I don't know about you, but I can't feel like I have trust in someone unless I have a very, very close relationship with them."

2. Show you care.

"A good leader knows what the people he works with care about and isn't afraid to show it. When you do that, it gets people excited to work with you and want to help you. When you don't create those types of close working relationships, it's really difficult to get people to work together, to band together and to win together."

3. Stay humble.

"I was very apprehensive to take leadership roles at first. I've sort of always looked at myself as on the same level as every guy on my team, in racing and in business. I think that you have to stay grounded and humble."

Related: 4 Business Lessons from NASCAR

4. Put employees on the track to success.

"It's always a fun challenge to groom people for higher positions. It's important to provide them with the opportunities that they seek and that they excel in, and to also prepare them for advancement. Help employees grow their responsibilities at every level and they'll do great work for you."

5. Be proud when your best employees move on and up.

"The most fun and rewarding part of running a business is watching your people succeed. When you take someone and grow them at the ground level and they climb the ladder through your company, it's a good feeling when that person graduates to the next level, even if they leave your company and take their career to the next level. You tell them, "Good job' and you mean it when you do."

6. Hire the right person for the right job.

"If you put someone in a position that they're not qualified for, it makes the job miserable for everybody around them. Avoid that from that start. Better to really know who you're hiring and what they're capable of up front than finding out later and things not working out."

Related: 15 Motivational Quotes From Legends In Sports

7. Spend quality time.

"I make a point of going to lunch with my team. Do things as simple as that, [connecting] with them and understanding what they're doing with their jobs -- and what they're doing when they're not at their jobs. Show them it matters to you. Bottom line: Spend quality time with the people you work with."
Kim Lachance Shandrow

Former West Coast Editor

Kim Lachance Shandrow is the former West Coast editor at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was a commerce columnist at Los Angeles CityBeat, a news producer at MSNBC and KNBC in Los Angeles and a frequent contributor to the Los Angeles Times. She has also written for Government Technology magazine, LA Yoga magazine, the Lowell Sun newspaper, HealthCentral.com, PsychCentral.com and the former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Coop. Follow her on Twitter at @Lashandrow. You can also follow her on Facebook here

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