Hours before he was set to address Congress for the first time, Donald Trump was still working to determine what, exactly, he would say. Aided by a select group of speechwriters and advisers, the president continued tweaking and scrapping, adding and subtracting lines from his speech, nearly right up until the moment he took the stage and began to read the final draft from the teleprompter.

Ivanka Trump, the president’s eldest daughter, was among the inner circle that helped craft the speech, working line-by-line on certain portions of the draft, according to a White House official. And she was there to listen that night, sitting seats away from her stepmother, First Lady Melania Trump, hearing her father read the words she’d helped write about paid family leave and the environment. Her husband, senior White House aide Jared Kushner, who also worked on the speech, sat by her side.

For the night, they appeared united as a First Family supporting their patriarch, even though this particular family has long balanced the duality of supporting a man who is both their father and boss.

Ivanka has walked that tightrope for nearly her entire professional life, as has Kushner, who worked for his own father’s family real-estate empire before joining his father-in-law in the White House. Trump’s two eldest sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, took over running the day-to-day operations of the Trump Organization earlier this year when their father and sister stepped down from the company.

Only Tiffany, Trump’s daughter from his second marriage and the youngest of his adult children, has remained outside the family business, mostly because she only graduated from college last year, and by appearances, outside the inner-most familial dynamics, as well, by way of her West Coast upbringing. The 23-year-old, who grew up outside the gilded confines of Trump Tower—across the country in Calabasas, California, with her mother, Marla Maples—has been a frequent object of fascination from Trump observers who have charted her absences from campaign events and noted each time her father appeared to exclude her from his praise. They highlighted when she would be seated farther back or to the side or in the wings when her siblings were front and center.

But that may soon change. As Ivanka toiled away on her father’s address in Washington, Don Jr., Eric, and Tiffany were holding a grand opening ceremony for their new towering hotel in Vancouver. As the ribbon was cut, Don Jr. told the crowd that they may be seeing more of their younger sibling around the office.

“Tiffany, soon to be within the organization, always great to have you with us,” he said, according to Bloomberg.

Tiffany is currently waiting to hear from law schools to which she has applied. Any plans for her to join the Trump Organization may wait for that. But for now, with Ivanka in Washington and her older brothers running the shop while the real boss is in the Oval Office, there is more room in the family business than there once was. And there might be no greater time to join the Trump Organization. Business is on the up-and-up, after all. Mar-a-Lago doubled its initiation fees in January, weeks before Trump’s inauguration. Rooms at the new Trump Hotel in D.C., which was mostly empty before the election, are suddenly filled with revelers itching to catch a glimpse of the president, who has been known to pop by. The company plans to expand its hotel footprint to more cities across the country, and even Trump himself admitted to The New York Times that the brand was “hotter” now than ever. Tiffany may be stepping into an ethical mess, with the company’s primary owner in the Oval, but at least it’s a booming mess, and one that’s taking its White House ties to the bank. A 23-year-old could make worse career choices.