Let's hear your reasons...
We have a lot of electrical outlets and a bench in back. So bringing the plane in nose first keeps everything nice and close. That is the main reason it has worked out nice. I always have one battery minder cable and in the winter a tannis heater cord so I only need about 10ft vs about twice that from the far side wall.
I think similar to
@Salty, I can taxi right up to the door, open it and hardly any slope to push it up. Since its downhill on the way back out I can just push on the ugly strut and if I plan it right I don't even need the nose wheel tool as it will turn as I push it.
We have a separate room in the back where we can drive a car inside. So having the nose in first puts the pilot side door on the same side as that access door.
Maybe more trivial, but the prop is farther away from the big door and people walking around up front.
We get some snow and a bit of ice that sneaks under (still working that one). So bringing in nose first means the nose wheel doesn't get frozen into the ice.
I know people get all bent about using a winch and the tail tiedown. I don't do this but have no qualms with it. That being said, if you want to winch it in, I would think a winch connected to the nose wheel tool would be 100% safe.
I do have a lawn tractor to pull the plane around. When it is being stored nose in first, I can just pull it all the way straight in without the nasty haywagon backing problem.
Actually I never would have even thought about it but my hangar neighbor does this too.
But it looks stupid