Rangers' Ibrox-based staff have been told there will be no redundancies among the club's permanent workforce.
This is reported to be one of the key stipulations players such as Steven Whittaker and Steven Naismith made before agreeing to a wage-cut.
It is, however, believed Rangers' London office will close. The club announced the launch of the office in January with the appointment of global partnerships director Misha Ser.
A breakthrough was made on Thursday night when high-earners Whittaker and Naismith were both understood to have signed an agreement regarding a reduction in their salaries.
The Scotland pair were among about half a dozen players to have stalled on signing a deal late on Tuesday night despite agreeing in principle to wage cuts of 75 per cent.
Players trained Friday morning and administrators were hoping to secure signatures from all first-team players in order to stave off what they termed "significant" redundancies among the playing squad in order to save £1million a month.
Ticketus
Sasa Papac was the first player to leave Murray Park for the day after training, as has normally been the case this week, and more began departing later on Friday afternoon.
David Healy, Andrew Little, Scott Gallacher, Lee McCulloch, Jamie Ness, Whittaker, Kyle Bartley, Ross Perry and Kirk Broadfoot had all left through the front gate by about 4.30pm.
Former Hearts midfielder Gary Mackay, who acts as Lee Wallace's agent, left shortly afterwards, while joint administrator David Whitehouse left just before 5pm.
Meanwhile, reports claim Ticketus, whose money allowed Craig Whyte to complete his takeover, are backing former director Paul Murray's takeover consortium.
The investment firm paid £24.4million for rights to future season tickets and it is understood the company claim they have sound legal advice that they are entitled to those tickets under any circumstances.
Earlier this week, Rangers director Dave King claimed Whyte had told him that Ticketus had no recourse to Rangers.